Wo:to’ u v Weston, tviH Jfc. WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS 1978 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Marsha Bianchi PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Henrik Dohlman EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Cynthia Johnston BUSINESS MANAGER Laurence Schwartz COPY EDITORS Paul Miller Liz Park EDITORIAL STAFF Tom Breen Monica Galligan Liz Park Alicia Vlachos SPORTS EDITORS Lisa DiStefano Patty Penfield BUSINESS STAFF Wendy Jones Brooks Nelson Kathy Spencer PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Alex Barnett John Delaney Blake LeBaron Matt Shannon Paul Strumph TYPING EDITOR Susan DiBartolomeis ADVISERS Charles S. Hatch Iona Nickeson DEDICATION For many years now, John Barclay has devoted himself to the cultivation of Weston High School’s drama program. One need only look at the profes¬ sional quality of his productions to discern his great talent for the theatre. Yet more important again is his personality: John Barclay’s is an affable and dynamic nature, and these two traits combine to make everything he does invit¬ ingly friendly and exciting. Whether it be in one of his regular English classes, on stage, or in any other school activity, his enthusiasm for hard work and perfection are contagious. The great number of persons interested in drama at Weston attests not only to his popularity, but equally to the sense of involvement Mr. Barclay gives to those participating. One can learn practically any¬ thing under his tutelage, and, in so doing learn about oneself. This volume is dedicated then, to a man who has become, in himself, an institution at our school. This he has accomplished with great flair, and with an obvious enjoyment of his work. Just being with John Barclay is a learning experi¬ ence. 2 3 4 5 6 7 A SPECIAL RECOGNITION Mr. Santospago and Mr. Shepard, the class of 1978 thanks you for helping us survive our four years at Weston High School. Our class has hatched some incredible schemes, but your practicality and steadfastness turned our half-baked ideas into feasible projects. Without you our carnivals would have been fiascos and hundreds of towels would still be strewn about room 38, unsorted and undeli¬ vered. The technical skills and experience you possess saved “Open¬ ing Night” from disaster. The time, consideration and total personal commitment that you have so willingly given to us has been invaluable. 10 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS. L to R: Bill Zieff, Treasurer; Coralie Campobasso, Vice-President; Paul Nolan, Secretary; T.J. Costello, President. PAUL D. ABERCROMBIE October 6 35 Bittersweet Lane On a crystal morning I can see the dewdrops falling Down from a gleaming heaven, I can hear the voices call When you cornin’ home now, son, the world is not for you. Kerry Livgren ARA AFTANDILIAN February 8 144 Beaver Road And so often times it happens that we live our lives in chains, and we never know we hold the key. The Eagles If you want to get to Heaven, You’ve got to raise a little Hell. Ozark Mountain Daredevils COURTNEY ANN ALLINSON August 23 157 Country Drive Don’t be afraid to care Leave but don’t leave me Look around and choose your own ground For long you live and high you fly And smiles you’ll give and tears you’ll cry And all you touch and all you see Is all your life will ever be. Pink Floyd JOHN STEPHEN ALPHAS June 7 19 Stillmeadow Road If it doesn’t come naturally, keep working on it until it does. Unknown 12 CLAIRE M. ANDERSON October 15 19 Tamarack Road Some day I will die. And when I die, I want others to know that I have lived ... for I am not just another member of the society. I am me! Anonymous ELISABETH ANDRESEN April 14 15 Pond Brook Circle Don’t walk in front of me, I may not follow Don’t walk behind me, I may not lead Walk beside me, and just be my friend. And all you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be. Pink Floyd SANTO ANZA June 11 67 Spring Road Life is too short to dance with homely women, yet too long to live in fear, so dance with who comes and never look back. DOUG ATAMIAN May 14 4 Pheasant Trail To know that we know what we know, and that we do not know what we do not know, that is true knowledge. Confucius In the long run men hit only what they aim at. Therfore . . . they had better aim at something high. H.D. Thoreau 13 MELISSA BACHELDER February 27 304 Highland Street There are places I’ll remember All my life though Some have changed Some forever not for better Some have gone — And some remain the same All these places had their moments With lovers and friends I still can recall Some are dead and some are living In my life I’ve loved them all. Lennon McCartney Happy are those who dream dreams and are ready to pay the price to make them come true. L.J. Cardinal Suenens CYNTHIA BREED BATES February 24 266 Glen Road Hope is the thing with feathers That perches in the soul And sings the tune without the words And never stops at all. Emily Dickenson Voici mon secret. II est tres simple: On ne voit bien qu’avec le coeur. L’essentiel est invisible pour les yeux. Saint-Exupery WENDY HARPER BEHRINGER September 20 128 Merriam Street How long wilt thou neither listen nor observe, How long sit deaf and blind? For one moment take the path of the aware Renounce the companionship of the misguided, Strip the veil from the eyes of world-sight Look around thee, ahead, behind, up, down. Look and discover the nature of this whirling circle And that which encompasses it, that which surrounds you. Jam! (15th century) Life’s a banquet and most pour souls are starving to death. From “Marne” ANN ELIZABETH BAILEY July 21 82 Oxbow Road Come Saturday morning I’m going away with my friend: We’ll Saturday spend till the end of the day. Just I and my friend. We’ll travel for miles in our Saturday smiles, And then we’ll move on. But we will remember long after Saturday’s gone. In memory of Mr. George Lynch. Dory Previn 14 December 3 BRUCE G. BELL 121 North Avenue Learn as if you were to live forever Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Unknown What is a friend? A simple soul that dwells in two bodies. Aristotle SUSAN BELSKY August 14 8 Orchard Avenue Walking in the sand Thinking of things adventures in my mind Of tall ships that sail Across the ocean wide They don’t wait for me See how they glide away so gracefully And with tomorrow what will become of me They leave me so much to explain That’s the start of our guessing game. Ray Thomas ALI BEST April 7 208 Newton Street I can’t give my best unless I’ve got room to move. John Mayall And I’ve got the urge for going and I guess it’s time to go . . . Tom Rush MARSHA E. BIANCHI November 6 7 Highland Street Can you hear the evil crowd The lies and the laughter I hear my insides The mechanized hum of another world Where no sun is shining No red light flashing Here in this darkness I know what I’ve done I know all at once who I am. Donald Fagen Walter Becker It all comes of liking honey too much. A.A. Milne 15 LORI ANN BOCKWEG August 4 Nightcap Lane I do to my friends as I do with my books, I would have them where I can find them but I seldom use them. Ralph Waldo Emerson There is so much good in the worst of us, And so much bad in the best of us, That it hardly becomes any of us To talk about the rest of us. Unknown THOMAS A. BREEN March 18 266 North Avenue He drew a circle that shut me out — Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout. But Love and I had the wit to win: We drew a circle that took him in. Edwin Markham Be civil to all; social to many; familiar with few; friend to one; enemy to none. Benjamin Franklin BOB BOWHERS November 16 31 Sylvan Lane The society which scorns excellence in plumbing because plumbing is a humble activity, and tolerates shoddiness in philosophy because it is an exalted ac¬ tivity, will have neither good plumbing nor good phi¬ losophy. Neither its pipes nor its theories will hold water. John W. Gardner AVERILL CHARLES BROMFIELD October 2 76 Rolling Lane Ave, Oral . . . known for his perseverance and sportsmanship . . . ambition: to be good in a chosen field . . . enjoys electronics . . . interests in baseball and sailboat racing . . . wills to school: what’s left of his track shoes — the shoelaces . . . pet peeve: school barbecued-beef sandwiches . . . outside work as an auto and boat repairman . . . outstanding memory: sixth game of ’75 World Series . . . life philosophy: “Never stop trying’’ . . . favorite teacher: Miss Raymond . . . “Oh, okay!” The most important single ingredient in the formula of success is the knack of getting along with people. Theodore Roosevelt 16 TOM BROWN October 2 543 Boston Post Road Just a song before I go a lesson to be learned, traveling twice the speed of sound it’s easy to get burned. Crosby, Stills Nash PATRICIA LOU BROWN June 19 418 North Avenue Never esteem anything as of advantage to thee that shall make thee break thy word or lose thy self-respect. Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Very little is needed to make a happy live. Marcus Aurelius Antoninus JOSE CARLOS BRUSTOLONI May 23 RUA BOTAFOGO, 1430 90.000 — Porto Alegre — RS — BRASIL Chance favors the prepared mind. Louis Pasteur BOB BUCHANAN June 19 111 Summer Street . . . you are young, no sneering at loving and dancing while the sap rises and old age stays away. Horace Donner un sens plus pur aux mots de la tribu. Mallarme Tonight to fill the alcove dim with memories that in it linger on . . . Baudelaire Tot es mens. William IX of Aquitaine KIMBERLY ANNE BUONATO February 20 21 Westerly Road There is a tide in the affairs of men and women which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune. Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries. William Shakespeare GREG BURKE April 25 118 Pine Street If you can’t dazzle them with your brilliance, Then baffle them with your bullshit. Unknown The less one has to do, the less time one finds to do it it in. Lord Chesterfield SARAH ROSE CAIN January 23 52 Sylvan Lane Ask, and it shall be given you; Seek, and you shall find; Knock, and it shall be opened to you. New Testament, Matthew, VII, 7 CORALIE A. CAMPOBASSO October 31 11 Wildwood Lane Yesterday is already a dream; And tomorrow is only a vision; But today, well lived, Makes every yesterday A dream of happiness And every tomorrow A vision of hope. 18 Sanskrit BRADFORD CARPENTER November 25 242 Glen Road SUSAN E. CAPLES March 19 79 Country Drive I walked on the beach in the early morn I ran on the sand till I could run no more I stood on a rock looking out at the sea And I believed what I said when I said I feel free Steve Miller Let the disappointments pass Let the laughter fill you glass Let your illusions last until they shatter Whatever you might hope to find Among the thoughts that crowd your mind There won’t be many that ever really matter Jackson Browne EDITH CARLMAN June 6 74 Brown Street The only reward of virtue is virtue; The only way to have a friend is to be one. Emerson Brad . . . known for being able to run A.V. equipment . . . ambition: architectural engineer . . . enjoys physics. . .interested in radio sta¬ tion, lighting crew, technicians club . . . wills to school: the radio station, and hopes someone keeps it running . . . favorite teacher: Mr. Burke . . . life philosophy: “The whole theory of the universe is directed unerringly to one single in¬ dividual, namely to you.” 19 RICHARD A. CASO 158 Hickory Road Poet, What are thou? A man Of yesteryear, Today, And tomorrow, Of your heart Speaker of waveless seas And windless air Which we see not Or touch- And yet despair. Anonymous March 24 STEPHEN M. CASTELLINE February 14 536 North Avenue To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children; to earn the apprecia¬ tion of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false friends; to appreciate beauty, to find the best in others; to leave the world a bit better whether by a healthy child, a garden patch, or a redeemed Social Condition; to know even one life has breathed easier because you lived. This is to have succeeded. Ralph Waldo Emerson JEAN CHANDLER August 7 5 Aberdeen Road All things bright and beautiful, All creatures great and small . . . All things wise and wonderful, The lord God made them all. Cecil Frances Alexander SCOTT CHANDLER December 28 5 Silver Hill Road The cricket mounted on a bundle of twigs says, “I am the owner of all this wealth.” His position lasts until the first jolt. 20 G. WILLIAM CHAPMAN January 7 15 Myles Standish Road My Spelling is Wobbly. It’s good spelling, but it wobbles and the letters get in the wrong places. A.A. Milne CASSANDRA ANNE CHOVANCE November 15 36 Juniper Road to be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else — means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight; and never stop fighting! DAVID W. CHARPIE January 8 45 Ridgeway Road Let us be thankful for the fools. But for them the rest of us could not succeed. Mark Twain CHRISTOPHER CLEARY June 15 786 Boston Post Road The trouble with being too open minded is that your brains may fall out. Unknown e.e. cummings 21 JON CLIFTON March 20 45 Saddle Hill Road Red, Clif, Bing . . . known for mus¬ tangs, white teeth and Billy Bain im¬ personations . . . ambition: to be suc¬ cessful in life . . . pet peeve: conceited people . . . life philosophy: “Like peo¬ ple for what they are, not for what they can do’’ . . . cars, sports, drums . . . favorite subject: oral penmanship . . . favorite well-known personality: Chris Evert . . . favorite teacher: Mr. Hall . . . outside work: Paper route and gas station . . . outstanding memory: J.V. football game in the snow vs. Wayland during sophomore year . . . “That kills me”, “Yo!, “Basically!” SUZANNE DIANA COATES June 20 30 Myles Standish Road You see things as they are; and you ask “Why?” But I dream things that never were; and I ask “Why not?” George Bernard Shaw BRYON R. COLLINS June 13 21 Chiltern Road You can’t always get what you want, but if you try some¬ time, you just might find, you get what you need. Rolling Stones RICHARD P. COLPITTS November 14 1 Colpitts Road Never do today what you can put off until tomorrow. Unknown 22 MALCOLM COOK June 15 29 Derby Lane The Poet and the Painter Casting Shadows on the water — as the sun plays on the infantry returning from the sea. The do-er and the thinker: no allowance for the other as the failing light illumi¬ nates the Mercenary’s Creed. The home fire burning: the kettle almost boiling — but the master of the house is far away. The horses stamping — their warm breath clouding in the sharp and frosty morning of the day. And the poet lifts his pen as the soldier sheathes his sword. Ian Anderson 1972 When you’re born to play the fool and you see all the western movies weren’t you the one who does it wrong? . . . with a gun, with a gun, you will be what you are just the same. Steely Dan 1974 SCOTT CONNOLLY August 19 95 Deerpath Lane You are what you choose to be It’s whatever it is you see That life will become Whatever it is you might think you have You have nothing to lose Through every dead and living thing Time runs like a fuse And the fuse is burning And the earth is turning Jackson Browne TIMOTHY JOHN COSTELLO January 2 200 Ridgeway Road Every man is the architect of his own fortune. A. Claudius AMY C. CRAFTS December 1 50 Colchester Road Our revels now are ended: these our actors, As I foretold you, were all spirits, and Are melted into air, into thin air; And, like the baseless fabric of this vision The cloud-capp’d towers, the gorgeous palaces, The solemn temples, the great globe itself, Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve, And like this insubstantial pageant faded, Leave not a rock behind: We are such stuff As dreams are made of, and our little life Is rounded with a sleep. William Shakespeare from “The Tempest” 23 JEAN CRANE December 8 56 Black Oak Road MARY CRONIN October 15 65 Juniper Road “Reeling and writhing, of course to begin with,” Mock Turtle replied, “and the different branches of arithmetic — ambition, distraction, uglification, and derision.” Lewis Carroll How a minority, reaching majority, seizing authority, hates a minority. L.H. Robbins PETER CREMMEN May 25 110 Cherry Brook Road There are no good or bad times in life, there are only things to be remembered and things to be forgotten . . . Unknown I am the best, not because I’m so great, but because others are so bad. MARK S. CROWLEY June 7 860 Boston Post Road Although some things are more enjoyable than others, life has its priorities. Complete them, and life’s pleasures are much more enjoyable. M. Crowley 24 KATHRYN DAVIS April 6 10 Westgate Road “Pooh, promise you won’t forget me, ever?” “Not even when I’m a hundred?” Christopher Robin asked. “I promise,” Pooh said. Still with his eyes on the world Christopher Robin put out a hand and felt for Pooh’s paw. “Pooh,” said Christopher Robin earnestly. “Whatever happens you will understand, won’t you?” “Understand wnat?” “Oh nothing,” he laughed and jumped to his feet. “Come on.” “Where?” said Pooh. “Anywhere,” said Christopher Robin. A.A. Milne DEBBIE DAWSON June 3 7 Spruce Hill Happy are those who dream dreams and are ready to pay the price to make them come true. L.J. Cardinal Suenens KELLY DAWSON March 17 7 Spruce Hill Road Oh, oh children of the land Love is still the answer, take my hand The vision fades, a voice I hear “Listen to the madman!” But still I fear and still dare not Laugh at the madman. Brian May BRIAN DERUSHA June 21 325 Conant Road Woody, Woods . . . Always in a good mood. If one doesn’t explore . . . One will never know . . . Woody 25 SUSAN M. DIBARTOLOMEIS January 6 91 Sherbum Circle Live hand in hand And together we’ll stand On a threshold of a dream. Moody Blues HENRIK GUNNAR DOHLMAN November 9 49 Newton Street . . . every revolutionary opinion draws part of its strength from a secret conviction that nothing can be changed. George Orwell LISA-ANNETTE ANGELINA DISTEFANO February 18 6 Colonial Way Keep smiling, it makes people wonder what you’ve been up to. Unknown LANCE WILLIAM DILLAWAY July 29 30 Drabbington Way His Sacred, Majesty, Chance, decides everything. Voltaire We will either find a way or make one. Hannibal 26 ELIZABETH ANN DOUGLAS April 24 19 Lexington Street Love is not all; it is not meat nor drink Nor slumber nor a roof against the rain; Nor yet a floating spar to men that sink And rise and sink and rise and sink again; Love cannot fill the thickened lung with breath, Nor clean the blood, nor set the fractured bone; Yet many a man is making friends with death Even as I speak, for lack of love alone. It well may be that in a difficult hour, Pinned down by pain and moaning for release, Or nagged by want past resolution’s power, I might be driven to sell your love for peace, Or trade the memory of this right for food. It well may be. I do not think I would. Edna St. Vincent Millay JEANINE M. DOYLE May 25 204 Merriam Street There are three things which are real, God, human folly, and laughter. The first two are beyond our comphrehension, So we must do what we can with the third. Aubrey Mennon’s version of Ramayana DAVID ELMES December 30 90 Cherry Brook Road Nothing in life is so exhilarating as to be shot at without result. Winston Churchill LINDA ANN ENGLISH October 31 15 Hobbs Brook Road To be what we are, and to become what we are capable of becoming, is the only end of life. R.L. Stevenson 27 BRUCE I. EWEN January 30 60 Beaver Road Mothlike, we are drawn to the bright flame of truth, comphrehending just enough of that fierce light that the wisest of our dim-eyed swarm knows in which direction to move. Unknown It’s not the critic who counts . . .The credit belongs to the man who is actu¬ ally in the arena; whose face is marred by dust, sweat, and blood . . . Theodore Roosevelt JAMES FALLON June 23 17 Bakers Hill Road LISA MARIE FARINA October 8 85 Byron Road Take your time, think a lot, Why think of everything you’ve got, For you will still be here tomorrow, But your dreams may not. Cat Stevens AMY FERGUSON May 6 24 Sylvan Lane Good people will be remembered as a blessing, but the wicked will soon be forgotten. Proverbs 10:7 I get by with a little help from my friends. The Beatles Fond memories of winter of ’76 at Exxon. Remember, Ellen? 28 JOSEPH FERRELLI July 17 673 Wellesley Street These are the seasons of emotion and like the winds they rise and fall. This is the wonder of devotion; I see the torch we all must hold, This is the mystery of the quotient; Upon us all a little rain must fall. Led Zeppelin LESLIE GAIL FIELDS May 10 535 North Avenue Through the bare window is revealed my life; hazy figures dancing moodily to the touch of forgotten winds. I remember the pain of stale words that burned my face — but it affects me not, now. When the song of my breath breaks the weighted silence. ANDREA MARGARET FISH December 15 70 Bradford Road Very little is needed to make a happy life. It is all within yourself, in your way of thinking. Marcus Aurelius 29 CHRIS FORAN 23 Walnut Road I expect to pass through this world but once; any good thing therefore that I can do, or any kindess that I can show to any fellow creature,let me do it now; let me not not defer or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again. Etienne de Grellet April 16 PAMELA R. FOSTER March 18 29 Woodchester Drive TONY FRANCHI August 23 2 Woodridge Road I live for those who love me, for those who know me true; For the heaven that smiles above me, and awaits my spirit too. For the cause that lacks assistance, for the wrong that needs resistance For the future in the distance, and the good that I can do. LISA ANN FRANK September 25 311 South Avenue Daybreak finds you up and alive — just as though you could touch a star But sunset seems to leave you weary — alone and wondering who you are Don’t deny that lonely feeling that keeps stealing on you from deep down inside Hey can’t you see that it’s no good concealing a feeling that hurts you to hide. James Taylor 30 G.L. Banks SUSAN PAMELA FRANK February 29 99 Love Lane Some people are going to like me, and some peo¬ ple aren’t, so I might as well be me. Then at least I will know that the people who like me, like me. ANNE FURFEY February 29 52 Bradyll Road It’s not easy to be calm, when you’ve something going on, but take your time think a lot, why think of everything you’ve got. For you will still be here tomorrow bu your dreams may not. C. S. All men have the stars, but all these stars are silent. You — only you — will have stars that can laugh. Antoine de Saint-Exupery JAMIE L. FRIEDLANDER November 2 6 Baldwin Circle If grape is a fruit, then grapefruit is re¬ dundant. Craig Shaw A star is just a piece of sky that glows in the dark. Unknown 31 March 30 Thad Jones NINA ROYCE GARFIELD February 4 292 South Avenue You can’t always get what you want, but if you try sometime, you just might find, you get what you need. The Rolling Stones DOROTHY ANN (TEDDI) GALLIGAN January 5 30 Bakers Hill Road Se a chama que esta dentro de ti Se apagar, As almas que estao so teu lado Marrerao de frio. Mauriac O passaro eriga-se no frio mas o sol secara suas penas. O novo dia traz novas possibilidades. O passaro, antes de seu voo, nao imagina como atravessara o oceano. A Maria Bethania LOUISE LAWRENCE GOGEL December 21 5 Granison Road The road goes ever on and on Down from the door where it began. Now far ahead the Road has gone, And I must follow, if I can, Pursuing it with eager feet, Until it joins some larger way Where many paths and errands meet And whither then? 1 cannot say. J.R.R. Tolkien PETER GOLDSTEIN 195 Westerly Road We were ready to play, right? 32 DAVID GOODE January 7 44 Ledgewood Road The secret of life is enjoying the pas¬ sage of time. James Taylor ALEXANDRA (DOODLE) GRANT September 9 55 Wellesley Street There are songs that make you happy And songs tnat make you sad; But with a happy song to sing It never seems as bad. Stevie Wonder CHARLES R. GRANT June 1 55 Wellesley Street He who does not love wine, women and song remains a fool his whole life long. John Heinrich PAULA JEAN GRAUNAS October 31 37 Spring Road Once someone said something nice about me, And, all undeserved though I knew it to be, I treasured it there on my heart’s deepest shelf, Till one day I quite surprised even myself By honestly making an effort to be That nice thing somebody said about me! Unknown 33 NICHOLAS A. GREEN January 26 560 Wellesley Street Like leaves on trees the race of man is found, Now green in youth, now with’ring on the ground: Another race the following spring supplies, They fall successive and successive rise. Homer TAMARA GUREVITZ July 14 58 River Road Known for quietness in school . . . ambition: to be a scientist . . . favorite subject: science . . . favorite well known personality: Carl Sagan . . . interests in space exploration, horseback riding, painting . . . outstanding memory of horse running on dunes . . . life philosophy: “I nave always believed in the law of nature, the power of the sea and the immortality of space.” CHAD HALE October 29 6 Bradyll Road We go sailing down the calming streams Drifting endlessly by the bridge To be over We will see To be over Do not suffer through the game of chance that: plays Always doors to lock away your dreams Think it over Time will heal your fear Thing it over Balance the thoughts that release within you Yes LESLIE HALL December 4 90 Bradford Road Ambition: to do something right . . . pet peeve: phony people . . . “Be yourself” . . . favorite subject: ones that don’t require homework . . . favorite well-known personalities: David Bren¬ ner, Gene Wilder, Cat Stevens . . . wills to school: sister Pam . . . “zzz . . .” All the times that I’ve cried Keeping all the things I knew inside It’s hard, but it’s harder to ignore it. If they were right I’d agree But it’s them they know not me Now there’s a way, and I know that I Have to go away. Cat Stevens 34 KENNETH ROBERT HARRIS April 7 642 Boston Post Road I’ve got no time to spread in groups The time has come to be gone Though, to our health, we drank a thousand times before it’s time to Ramble On. Led Zeppelin JENNIFER ANN HOCKING July 10 21 Autumn Road Now I’ve been happy lately Thinking about the good things to come And I believe it could be Something good has begun. Cat Stevens JILL HODGES March 31 14 Bradyll Road And if per chance, your heart be sore, The greater need to smile the more. Robert Adams Suffern CYNTHIA H. HOEHLER May 13 3 Conant Road Self-finding is possible only when there is self-forgetting. Ralph Sockman 35 SUSAN HONTHUMB March 14 77 Pinecroft Road Sue . . . known for being quiet . . . ambition: being the best at whatever comes around . . . pet peeve: perfect looking people ... ice hockey, . . . soccer . . . favorite political figure: Hitler . . . “Woof!” The more we live, more brief appear our life’s succeeding stages; a day to childhood seems a year and years like passing ages. T. Campbell JULIA ISAACS January 20 O Bay State Road Open my ears to music; let Me thrill with spring’s first flutes and drums — But never let me dare forget The bitter ballads of the slums. Louis Untermeyer DEBRA LYNNE ISGUR April 28 KIM JACKSON June 30 6 Buckskin Drive 11 October Lane You got places to go, you got people to see; Still I’m gonna miss you. But anyway, I wish you good spaces in far away places you go And if you need somebody sometime, You know I will always be there. Gordon Lightfoot See Daddy, I made it! 36 DOUG JACOBY March 25 11 Indian Hill Road When I’m gone They’d say we’re all fools and we don’t understand Oh be strong Don’t turn your heart You’re all We’re all For all For always . . . Queen We’ve each a darkening hill to climb. Edwin A. Robinson BEVERLY JANIGAN August 1 73 Brown Street If sometimes we don’t get lost there’s a chance we may never find our way. Unknown JOHN A. JASPERSE February 8 198 Conant Road Jaz, the easy-over kid . . . known for frequently standing on the pitcher’s mound . . . interested in baseball and track . . . likes math and science . . . outstanding memory of Junior Prom 1977 . . . wills to school: five broken baseball bats . . . life philosophy: “To be the best, you’ve got to pay the price.” I believe in the Sun; even when it is not shining I believe in Love; even when I’m alone I believe in God; even when He is silent. Anonymous ANNE JOHNSON August 21 27 Partridge Hill Road One of the great secrets of contentment is the refusal To take ourselves seriously; To laugh at ourselves, To stand aside And in imagination Watch ourselves go by. Gilbert Hay A man isn’t finished when he’s defeated; he is finished when he quits. 37 CYNTHIA E. JOHNSTON July 12 19 Arrowhead Road The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science. Albert Einstein SUSAN JOKINEN July 24 419 North Avenue You will find peace of mind If you look way down in your heart and soul Don’t hesitate, because the world seems cold Stay young at heart for you’re never, never old. Maurice White GWETHALYN JONES March 30 82 Deer Path Lane Remember that you have not only the right to be an individual; you have an obligation to be one. Eleanor Roosevelt You are only what you are when no one is looking. Salada Tea Bag SABE JONES March 31 307 Conant Road Sabey-Babey, Luie . . . “Good humor makes all things tolerable” . . . enjoys dancing, diving, and football cheerleading . . . Outstanding memory: pre-game pep party . . . “What was I going to say?” I believe for every drop of rain that falls, a flower grows. I believe that somewhere in the darkest night, a candle glows. I believe for everyone who goes astray, someone will come to show the way. I believe, I believe. 38 I FRED JORDAN October 1 35 Dale Street, Needham, MA. A strength which becomes clearer and stronger through its experience of obs¬ tacles is the only strength that can con¬ quer them. Albert Schweitzer CECILE JORGE July 25 6 rue de l’Argonne 57120 Rombas, France L’Amerique etait un reve . . . prends l’avion, je t’attends. WILLIAM M. KANZER February 10 25 Spruce Hill Road I don’t like work — no man does — but I like what is in the work — the chance to find yourself. Your own reality — for yourself, not for others — what no other man can ever know. They can only see the mere show, and never can tell what it really means. CINDY KAPLAN July 11 423 Concord Road What do you know? You know what you perceive What can you show? Nothing of what you believe And as you grow, Each thread of life that you leave Will spin around your deeds And dictate your needs As you sell your soul And you sow your seeds And you wound yourself And your loved one bleeds And your habits grow And your conscience feeds On all that you thought you should be I never thought this could happen to me. Don McLean 39 DAVID KAPLAN October 4 61 Beaver Road BRIAN KAUFMAN December 31 There is only one religion, though there are a hundred versions of it. George Bernard Shaw Hell is — other people. Jean-Paul Sartre 140 Meadowbrook Road But time has no mercy For the growing young soul, It leaves us with memories, While it makes us grow old. Loggins Messina MERRILEE KELLER October 19 186 Meadowbrook Road If you ain’t got nothin’, you got nothin’ to lose. Bob Dylan Fly on a silver bird, Cry on a spoken word, Follow your dreams. Laying foundations for new generations, Think of the good things you’ll see. Dave Mason CHRISTOPHER JOSEPH KELLY February 19 59 Orchard ' Avenue You are no better than you should be. John Fletcher 40 KIM KENNEDY 402 North Avenue January 19 If I had a box just for wishes, And dreams that had never come true, The box would be empty, Except for the memory of how they were answered by you. Jim Croce JAMES KLEINROCK June 26 76 Hallett Hill Road Truth has no special time of its own. Its hour is now — always. Albert Schweitzer JENNIFER KENEALLY July 10 326 Highland Street Breathe, breathe in the air Don’t be afraid to care Leave, but don’t leave me Look around and choose your own ground. For long you live and high you fly And smiles you’ll give and tears you’ll cry And all you touch and all you see Is all your life will ever be. “Breathe” by Pink Floyd California dreamin’ . . . The Mammas and the Pappas 1 ■Hi LAURIE MAREN KNOTT July 15 119 Radcliffe Road Known for a very short memory . . . pet peeve: long-term assignments . . . “If you don’t have to do it today, don’t.” . . . cheerleading, singing, sailing . . . favorite political figure: John F. Kennedy . . . favorite teachers: Joe Vero, J.E. Jordon, Mr. Blakeslee . . . outstanding memories of “Music Man” cast party and pre-game pep party . . . “Ye, Gods!” . . . knowing how way leads on to way, I doubted if I should ever come back. Robert Frost Roads go ever ever on under cloud and under star, Yet feet that wandering have gone turn at last to home afar. J.R.R. Tolkien 41 LAURIE E. KNOWLES October 24 227 North Avenue So get closer to believing Though your world is torn apart For a moment changes all things And to end is but to start And if your journey is unrewmded May your God lift up your heart. You are windblown . . . E. L. P. BIRGITHE KRAGH November 30 Dalvej, 11, Bjerre 8783 Hornsyld, Denmark BRUCE WILLIAM KRAKAUER 31 Beech Road Comparisons are offensive. April 8 Don Quixote ADRIENNE KRUY October 21 21 Driftwood Lane Why not think about times to come, And not about the things you’ve done, If your life was bad to you, Just think what tomorrow will do. Fleetwood Mac 42 DAVID KULOW December 24 11 Colonial Way Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day Fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way Kicking around on a piece of ground in your home town Waiting for someone or something to show you the way Pink Floyd MICHAEL LEACH March 9 40 Rockport Road This may seem like a funny situation, but life is full of funny situations. Paul Thoreau Gerken JOHN LIU July 30 16 Orchard Avenue We do not remember days, We remember moments. Cesare Pavese ELLEN LUCHETTI November 5 215 Hickory Road For long you live and high you fly, And smiles you give and tears you cry, And all you touch and all you see, Is all your life will ever be. Roger Waters I get by with a little help from my friends. The Beatles Thanks for the memories. Bob Hope Fond memories of winter ’76 at Exxon. Remember, Amy? 43 KENNY MACDONNELL June 11 15 Whtney Tavern Road Let today embrace the past wi th re¬ membrance and the future with long¬ ing. Kahlil Gibran CLAUDIA MACLEOD January 3 Airport Road, Lincoln The Universe is change; our life is what our thoughts make. Marcus Aurelius Antonius CHRISTIAN MACKENZIE January 16 22 Arrowhead Road Life is a rat race; Even if you win, You’re still a rat. William Sloone Coffin We are all in the gutter, But some of us are looking at the stars. Oscar Wilde Now here is my secret, it’s a very simple secret: it’s only with the heart which one can see rightly, what is essential is invisible to the eye. Antoine de St.-Exupery November 27 MAURA A. C. MACNEIL 42 Hill Top Road 44 JOHN S. MANCUSO November 24 45 Bradyll Road Now you know that you are free, Living all your life at ease, Each day has its always, A look down life’s hallways, doorways, To lead you there. Moody Blues STEVEN L. MARSDEN October 5 18 Jones Road O sibili si ergo LILY ANN MARDEN October 26 61 Bullard Road All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream. Edgar Allan Poe DIANE JOY MARTIN January 8 168 Summer Street She got her notebook, slammed her door, and thundered down the steps. “Good-bye, good¬ bye,” she yelled, as though she were going to Africa, and slammed out the front door. L. Fitzhugh 45 ERIC W. MARTINO January 26 139 River Road Thought is thine own. E.W.M. SUSAN ELIZABETH MCGARRY November 26 11 Indian Hill Road The ties that bond us to life are tougher than you imagine, or than anyone who has not felt how roughly they may be pulled without breaking. You might be miserable without a home, but even you could live; and not so miserably as you suppose. Anne Bronte Tu n’es rien que ta vie. Jean-Paul Sarte ROBERT H. MCBRIDE March 6 171 Wellesley Street There is a loftier ambition than merely to stand high in the world. It is to stoop down and lift mankind a little higher. Henry Van Dyke In great things it is enough to have tried. Erasmus DAVID FRANCIS MCKENZIE November 27 829 Boston Post Road Mac, Big Mac . . . known for throwing the discus . . . pet peeve: red Camaros . . . interested in track, art and the Red Sox . . . favorite well known personality: FFM . . . outside work at McKenzie Travel Some people have to be out on a limb before they’ll turn over a new leaf. Frank Jones 46 JACKIE MERCIER November 15 293 North Avenue Tomorrow-oh, ’twill be, If we should live a thousand years! Our time is all today, today. James Montgomery 1771-1854 NANCI MESSING August 12 84 Nobscot Road Ain’t it funny that the way you feel shows on your face — and no matter how you try to hide it’ll state your case — Now a frown will bring your spirits down to the ground and never let you see, the good things all around. Earth, Wind and Fire LISA MERCURI March 19 502 South Avenue What is most important is invisible Antoine de Saint-Exupery PAUL MILLER January 28 96 Byron Road The Muse, nae poet ever found her Till by himself he learned to wander A down some trotting burns meander. An’ no think lang. Robert Burns 47 PENNY MILLER April 20 154 Newton Street Sitting in my room staring out the window and wonderin’ where you had gone. Thinking back to the happy hours that just ran along. Outside the wind is blowing, it seems to call your name, again. Where have you gone? Doobie Brothers M. JEAN MOLLENKAMP January 16 9 Pembroke Road To dream the impossible dream To fight the unbeatable foe To bear with unbearable sorrow To run where the brave dare not go. JOHN MOONEY April 3 191 Newton Street Moon . . . known for partying . . . ambition: to make lots of money . . . life philosophy: “Live life to the fullest and enjoy yourself in doing so” . . . interested in golf, skiing, tennis . . .favorite subject: English . . . favorite well-known per¬ sonality: Dick Van Dyke . . . favorite teacher: Miss Raymond . . . outside work as a ski instruc¬ tor . . . outstanding memory: Labor Day weekend before senior year . . . “bummed out” Few people realize the importance of the art of lying in bed. Unknown To right the unrightable wrong To love, pure and chaste, from afar To try when your arms are to weary To reach the unreachable star! This is my Quest, to follow that star No matter how hopeless, no matter how far, To fight for the right without question or pause, To be willing to march into hell for a heavenly cause . . . Joe Darion JOAN BROOKE MOORE March 24 65 Old Road You have confused the true and the real. George Stanley 48 MICHAEL G. MORAN May 21 55 Pine Street The cruelest lies are often told in si¬ lence. R.L. Stevenson Genius develops in quiet places: Char¬ acter out in the full current of human life. Johann Wolfgang Van Goethe DONNA S. MOREY April 28 1610 E. Entrada Octava Tucson, Arizona If you can’t be yourself, who are you? T.D. JENNIFER MOSES April 18 65 Spruce Hill Road No one can make you feel inferior without your consent. Eleanor Roosevelt ABBY MOULTON May 9 20 Myles Standish Road Winter turns to spring a wounded heart will heal but never much too soon Everything must change The young become the old mysteries do unfold ’cause that’s the way of time Nothing and no one go unchanged 49 GRAHAM D. MOVITZ December 10 240 South Avenue Cracker, Movy . . . ambitions: many . . . pet peeve: Cadil¬ lacs, people in crowded halls . . . skiing, boating ... fa¬ vorite subject: Industrial Arts . . . favorite well-known per¬ sonality: Starsky . . . favorite teachers: Mr. Shepard, Mr. Santospago . . . outside work: my boat . . . will to school: one exhaust fan for the woodshop. LARRY NICKERSON January 4 59 Wellesley Street There’s a reason for all the rhymes. It’s the fact and a way of the times. It ' s moving emotion, it’s high and it’s low, no matter where you go. There is something for all who look. There’s a story in every book. All of the pages, between all the lines, so much you can find. Kansas BRIAN MULDOON August 10 280 Boston Post Road It is a great profession. There is the fascination of watching a figment of the imagination emerge througn the aid of science to a plan on paper. Then it moves in to realization in stone, metal or energy. Then it brings jobs and homes to men. Then it elevates the standards of living and adds the comforts of life. That is his high privilege. Herbert Hoover MARILYN ELIZABETH NOBLE February 10 148 Country Drive So on and on I go, The seconds tick the time out, There’s so much left to know, And I’m on the road to find out . . . Cat Stevens 50 PAUL NOLAN July 1 48 Ridgeway Road I built me a raft and she’s ready for floating. Doobie Brothers JEFFREY S. NORTH January 23 101 Buckskin Drive A ship in a harbor is safe, but that is not what ships are built for. Shedd If I couldn’t laugh I would go insane . . . Jimmy Buffet Life ' is just a tire swing. Jimmy Buffet DANNY O’CONNELL 32 Rockport Road They stumble that run fast. October 13 Shakespeare TRICIA M. O’HARA May 6 79 Nobscot Road Don’t give up until you drink from the silver cup. No one knows what he can do until he tries. The Eagles Cherish yesterday Dream tomorrow Live today Unknown 51 KAREN O’LEARY November 19 281 Glen Road Daybreak finds you up and alive — Just as though you could touch a star. But sunset seems to leave you weary — Alone and wondering who you are. James Taylor JACK R. PANNIER April 11 103 Conant Road It’s getting better all the time I used to get mad at my school The teachers that taught me weren’t cool You’re holding me down, turning me round Filling me up with your rules. I’ve got to admit it’s getting better. The Beatles BETSY ZOE PAPPAS August 1 25 Rockport Road Yesterday is already a dream And tomorrow is only a vision. But today well lived Makes every yesterday A dream of happiness And every tomorrow a vision of hope. Sanskrit I did it my way. Frank Sinatra I get by with a little help from my friends. The Beatles PAUL SCOTT PARESKY July 16 432 Glen Road Paul . . . known for talking about skiing, being rude and not paying up after losing bets . . . am¬ bition: to be exceedingly wealthy . . . pet peeve: people who don’t blush . . . life philosophy: “Stay healthy, then happy.” . . . skiing, swim¬ ming, music . . . favorite subject: Math . . . fa¬ vorite teacher: Mr. McCowan. Live each day to its fullest. 52 ELIZABETH ANN PARK February 22 11 Bradford Road If they give you ruled paper, write the other way. Juan Ramon Jimenez JOHN PARLA 18 Shady Hill Road Ir ' )HEi$i Bop; ihtoo Hedobsw Don’t now- WAmns oDin rajM ftor-ogBSt • BTWRpa ' ra oMfi ' roo diKGOBr- BontiTteiDNom- There’s imiUnETo oiangeIHe r dtoo ' keoii • March 16 ROBERT PEASE June 6 109 Sherbum Circle I’m looking for someone to change my life. I’m looking for a miracle in my life. And if I could see What it’s done to me . . . Justin Hayward John Lodge 4lJDlrrtAfeSME K fl)EK: Yoopfto TffiPDWjC toGTOOlUOINIlin- D m®r wind bot- ' And DIDTDO KNOW UF) OHTHE WH1PRJHG WDp • Led Zeppelin ANNE PEBERDY December 20 5 Granison Road Please, I do not grok the full meaning of the word. Robert Heinlein 53 JESSIE PECCHENINO October 28 17 Juniper Road It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness . . . we had everything before us, we had nothing be¬ fore us . . . Charles Dickens PATRICIA J. PENFIELD June 30 17 Bradford Road Come dance with the west wind and touch on the mountain tops Sail o’er the canyons and up to the stars And reach for the heavens and hope for the future And all that we can be, not what we are. John Denver VINCENT JOSEPH PERRY December 2 76 Cheney Street, Boston, MA ' tis education forms the common mind: Just as the twig is bent the tree’s inclined. Alexander Pope PHILIP M. PECK October 13 243 Ridgeway Road If I am not for myself, who is for me? If I care only for myself, what am I? If not now, when? Hillel 54 VIRGINIA (GINNY) PERRY October 18 6 Walnut Street Those who recognize problems as a human condition and don’t measure happiness by an absence of problems are the most intelli¬ gent kind of humans we know; also, the most rare. Dr. Wayne W. Dyer HEATHER PHILLIPS November 6 62 Montvale Road Hefty, Chubs, Porky, Kizzy, Heth . . . known for: eating chocolate chip cookies and breaking diets and chewing gum . . . ambition: to get skinny and have money . . . pet peeve: being wrong and knowing it . . . enjoys sun, eating, skiing and partying . . . favorite teachers: Mr. Barclay and Miss Raymond . . . outstanding memories: Stratton ’77 with P.M., J.Z., D.G., T.O., N.M., and M.C., and the Junior Prom’77 . . . frequently seen with weekend buddy Richard . . . “OK, I don’t care.” Everything I like is either illegal, immoral, or fattening. I get by with a little help from my friends I get high with a little help from my friends Mmmm, I’m going to try with a little help from my friends. The Beatles WEND ALL E. (TERRY) PHILLIPS November 2 37 Partridge Hill Road In the long run men hit only what they aim at. Therefore, though they should fail immediately, they had better aim at something high. H.D. Thoreau It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt. Lincoln LORI POLLOCK 437 South Avenue March 16 Think how the world would be if only for an instant we could share our love with everyone. Unknown April 3 DIANA L. PULCINI 44 Legion Road Forever I’ll remember As I pass by on the train Streets of Paradise we loved Now so few of them remain. Guess it’s finally goodbye Seems we came so suddenly to the end of childhood dreams And the way things used to be. B. Welch-H. Marvin-J.I.C. ALLISON RANDLE March 13 43 Warren Aveune As the moon and the stars call the order Inside my tides dance the ebb and sway And the sun in my soul’s sinking lower While the hope in my hand turns to clay. Now everything’s fine under heaven But now and then you gotta take time to pause If you’re down on the ground, your the best help around If you land in a boat without oars. Jimmy Page Robert Plant RONALD QUAN May 13 8 Arrowhead Road I shall grow old, but never lose life’s zest, Because the road’s last turn will be the best. Henry Van Dyke JOANNE S. REILLY August 28 220 Ridgeway Road to be nobody — but — myself — in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else — means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fighting. e.e. cummings 56 JEFF REIMAN August 8 51 Bradyll Road Go and fetch the captain’s log and tear the pages out We’re on our way to nowhere now, can’t bring the helm about None of us are left in any doubt We won’t be back again. A1 Stewart ALAN E. RICHARDSON July 24 159 Merriam Street Brevity is the soul of wit. Shakespeare GREGORY K. ROBBINS February 19 199 Country Drive Seldom can the heart be lonely, If it seeks lonelier still; Self forgetting, seeking only Emptier cups of love to fill. CINDY G. ROSSI February 8 40 Dean Road Banana, Rossini, Ross, De, Cin, Cindy . . . known for prom party . . . ambi¬ tion: to be a lawyer . . . life philoso¬ phy: “Take each day as it comes” . . . art, skiing, sailing, partying and having a good time . . . favorite subject: En¬ glish . . . favorite teacher: Miss McDonough . . . outstanding memo¬ ries of the Jr. Prom and the Marriott with A.B. and L.S. . . . wills to school: younger brother . . . “Really”, “Any¬ ways”, “Moving right along ...” 57 MARK R. SAEWERT February 6 20 Bakers Hill Road Succcess is counted sweetest by those who ne’er succeed. Emily Dickenson I saw a man pursuing the horizon; Round and round they sped. I was disturbed at this; I accosted the man. It is futile, I said, You can never — You lie, he cried, And he ran on. Stephen Crane VANESSA SAFOYAN June 5 47 Bakers Hill Road The world is a joke, you might as well laugh. Chinese fortune cookie JAMES SARKISIAN December 19 256 South Avenue Sark . . pet peeve: low limits and slow dealers . . . wills to school: ripped track shoes and burnt rubber in the parking lot . . . “Let’s raise the stakes . . . burnt” Is this the real life Is this just fantasy Caught in a landslide No escape from reality Open your eyes Look up to the skies and see I’m just a poor boy, I need no sympathy Because I’m easy come easy go A little high, little low Anyway the wind blows, doesn’t really matter to me. Freddie Mercury 58 LESLEY PAULINE SAUNDERS June 19 23 Wood Ridge Circle JAMES SAXE November 20 84 Westerly Road Jim, Jimmy .. . . enjoys tennis, skiing and ping-pong . . . pet peeve: an¬ chovies . . . interested in coin collec¬ tion and listening to loud music . . . favorite subject: math . . . favorite po¬ litical figure: Henry Kissenger ... fa¬ vorite well-known personality: Flip Wilson . . . outside work at a law firm and a summer camp . . . wills to school: the books .he will return at the end of the year . . . “Oh, wow!,” Hey there,” “What’s up?” “How’re you do¬ ing?” GREGORY D. SHAPIRO January 25 9 Laxfield Road A day without laughter is a day wasted. Unknown What, me worry? Alfred E. Neumann 59 LARRY SCHWARTZ February 23 236 Conant Road Hello twelve, Hello thirteen, Hello Love. Changes, Oh! down below, up above. Time to doubt, to break out, it’s a mess. Time to grow, time to go adolesce. Too young to take over, too old to ignore. Gee, I’m almost ready, but what for? There’s a lot that I’m not certain of. Hello twelve, Hello thirteen, Hello Love. And Now Life Really Begins . . . From “A Chorus Line” One’s outer life passes in a solitude haunted by the masks of others; one’s inner life passes in a solitude hounded by the masks of oneself. Eugene O’Neill PETER J. SENNOTT June 12 27 Golden Ball Road Pete, Congressman . . . favorite teach¬ ers: Mr. Shepard and Mrs. Woodbury . . . outside work at the Weston Police Station . . . outstanding memory: Ju¬ nior Prom . . . “Hey, Grommet!” And so, my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country. John F. Kennedy MARIA SEGIEN 3 Kendall Common Road The intelligent man that says it can’t be done should stay out of the way of the idiot that is doing it. Unknown 60 mh ADAM SLIFKA December 31 46 Westerly Road Welcome back my friends to the show that never ends, Come inside! Come inside! There behind a glass is a real blade of grass. Be careful as you pass, Move along! Move along! Emerson, Lake and Palmer AMY C. SMITH April 6 9 Marshall Way Good morning yesterday You wake up and time has slipped away And suddenly it’s hard to find The memories that you left behind Remember the times of your life. Anka LAURA K. SMITH April 27 4 Cherry Brook Road I remember a time when our fears could be named, and courage meant not refusing dares. I’ve just gotten taller; I’ve just gotten older, and the little ones, they call me a grownup. Carly Simon CHERYL ANN SPENCER April 14 73 Church Street Happiness is a function of accepting what is. Love is a function of cummunication. Health is a function of participation. Self Expression is a function of responsibility. W.E. It’s the classic tale of most inspired performers. Anyone whose art often burns with a passion of a man possessed is more often than not a soft-spoken personality away from their craft. C.C. 61 January 8 JEFF SPENCER 108 Country Drive Easy life don’t go too fast Before you know all the days have passed Think before you make a move If it’s too late then you’re bound to lose I wasn’t built for pain But I’d do it all again Easy life take it slow Now I’ve found the way to go Moving on leaving the past Easy life don’t go to fast It wa sn’t all the same But I’d do it all again. Roger Daltrey JUDITH A. STARR September 29 19 October Lane Remember me, for I am what I am what I appear to be who I am; where I go; is what I believe in. I can get by with a little help from my friends. Paul McCartney and John Lennon It’s a marvelous night for a moon- dance. Van Morrison MARK STEPHENS July 20 97 Westland Road It was this yet unknown energy — something phenomenal — which caused an entire world to wake up and realize that everyone knew a boy named Elvis! The lost sheep again had found a shepherd. When you near Ella, the mind says Fitzgerald. But when you hear Elvis, one thinks only of the King. This time came to pass in the Fifties. When you hear John, Paul, George and Ringo to¬ gether, the last names slip silently by as the mind be¬ comes fixed on the Beatles whose era was known as the Sixties. It has often been said that Art becomes great not. When it is “good” or “bad” but only when it abso¬ lutely cannot be ignored. For Led Zeppelin, that time began in the year of ’69, and the end of this time is not yet in sight. LAURA E. STEPHENS August 29 97 Westland Road Don’t walk in front of me; I may not follow. Don’t walk behind me; I may not lead Walk beside me and be my friend Unknown Terry Knight THERESA SURETTE April 25 365 Conant Road If you can’t accept me for the person I am, then please don ' t accept me at all, because I would rather be myself unknown. Hope The moment may be temporary but the memory is forever. Budd Meyor PAUL STRUMPH October 11 94 Bakers Hill Road If a man does not keep pace with his compan¬ ions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the beat which he hears, however measured or far away. Henry David Thoreau INGRID ALLYN STUART June 14 137 Sherburn Circle Sure enough when winter came, the carefree hedonistic grasshopper died. But the ant died too, without ever really having lived at all. Cartoon From the New Yorker THOMAS K. SWEET October 2 8 Farm Road It’s like a book, I think, this bloomin’ world Which you can read and care for just so long But presently you feel that you will die Unless you get the page you’re readin’ done, An’ turn another — likely not so good; But what you’re after is to turn ’em all. Rudyard Kipling 63 : ELIZABETH TENCA April 15 39 Byron Road Dreams so they say, Are for the fools and they let them drift away Peace, like the silent dove Should be flying, but it’s only just begun Like Columbus in the olden days We must all gather our courage Sail our ships out on the open seas Cast away our fears In all the years, that come and go And pick us up, always up. We may never pass this way again. Seals and Crofts LOURDES L. TOLENTINO February 8 9 Aspen Road When through one man a little more love and goodness, a little more light and truth comes into the world, then that man’s life has had meaning. Alfred Delp JILL A TIERNEY August 9 14 Westland Road Piglet sidled up to Pooh from behind, “Pooh” he whispered. “Yes, Piglet?” “Nothing,” said Piglet, taking Pooh’s paw. “I just wanted to be sure of you.” A. A. Milne MARGARET TORREY September 30 26 Stonecroft Circle No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wanted. Aesop It is better to light one candle than to curse the darkness. 64 Motto of the Christopher Society LYNN TRANT July 11 11 Legion Road And tomorrow we might not be together I’m no prophet, I don’t know nature’s ways So I’ll try and see into your eyes right now And stay right here, ’cause these are the good old days. Carly Simon JERYL TRIER September 11 119 Pine Street Happy are those who dream dreams, and are ready to pay the price to make them come true. L.J. Suenens STANLEY TRIER September 12 119 Pine Street A highway’s just a two lane road, connecting either way. I’ve seen enough of this end for awhile. But I’ve got to go to the distance, ’till I know I’ve seen a change. I’ve got to know the feel of every mile. J. Edwards 65 ALICIA MARIE VLACHOS October 1 426 Conant Road From birth to age eighteen, a girl needs good parents. From ei ghteen to thirty-five, she needs good looks. From thirty-five to fifty-five, she needs a good personality. From fifty-five on, she needs good cash. Sophie Tucker, age 69 CAROLINE WARD May 15 405 Concord Road We the willing, led by the unknowing, are doing the impossible, for the ungrateful. We have done do much with so little, for so long, we are now qualified to do anything with nothing. MIKE WECHSLER 40 Whitney Tavern Road When I think back on all the crap I learned in high school, it’s a wonder I can think at all. Paul Simon And if the cloud bursts thunder in you ear You shout and no one seems to hear And if the band you’re in starts playing different tunes. I’ll see you on the dark side of the moon. Pind Floyd ANN WATSON April 7 118 Deerpath Lane Why walk alone. Why worry when it ' s warm over here. You’ve got so much to say, say what you mean. Mean what you’re thinking, and think anything. Cat Stevens 66 VINCENT M. WEIR August 14 125 Loring Road Get wisdom, because it is better than gold: and purchase prudence, for it is more precious than silver. Proverbs 16:16 HOLLIS KENT WELCH April 15 54 Bay State Road MARY WELFORD August 10 75 Bogle Street Direct your eye right inward, and you’ll find a thousand regions in your mind yet undiscovered. Travel them, and be expert in home- cosmography. H.D. Thoreau The highway is for gamblers, Better use your sense Take what you have gathered from coincidence The vagabond, he’s rapping at your door He’s standing in the clothes that you once wore Strike another match, go start anew. And it’s all over now, baby blue Dylan We’ve laughed until my cheeks are tight; We’ve laughed until my stomach’s sore — If we could only stop we might Remember what we’re laughing for. Dorothy Aldis ELIZABETH F. WHITE January 14 52 Pine Street I am glad I shall never be young without wild country to be young in. Of what avail are forty freedoms without a blank spot on the map? Aldo Leopold 67 LISA ANN WILDI March 13 76 Radcliffe Road Yesterday is already a dream and to-morrow is only a vision; but to-day, well lived, makes every to¬ morrow a vision of hope. Sanskrit MARIE WOOD July 13 307 Woodland Drive Brightwaters, NY Yesterday is already a dream, and to-morrow is only a vision; but to-day, well lived, makes every to-morrow a vision of hope. Sanskrit March 14 Elinor Wylie GARY WINER October 11 20 Bullard Road “Hence it is,” she said. “What do you think?” Cynthia Weber yt DANIEL R. WHITMORE 107 Loring Road Avoid the reeking herd, Shun the polluted flock, Live like tnat stoic bird, The eagle of the rock. 68 JEANNE WREAN December 29 27 Bradford Road A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. There is a visible labour and there is an invisible labour. Victor Hugo CHERYL LYNN WU February 22 1 April Lane Life is a gift to be used every day, Not to be smothered and hidden away . . . Get out and live it each hour of the day, Wear it and use it as much as you may. Edgar Guest The purpose of life is to be that self which one truly is. Soren Kierkegaard BERNADETTE YAO May 15 39 Drabbington Way I want to learn what life is for. 1 don’t know much, I just want more. Ask what I want and I will sing. I want everything, everything. I’d cure the cold and the traffic jam. If there were floods I’d give a damn. I’d never sleep, I’d only sing, Let me do everything, everything. Paul Williams MARK ZABRISKIE July 13 6 Dogwood Road When life hands you a lemon, squeeze it and make lemonade! Anonymous 69 THOMAS JAMES ZAGAMI February 1 54 Drabbington Way Ziga Zig . . . known for his blue and white striped Camaro . . . ambition: to be something . . . pet peeve: Social Studies . . . “Be what you are and not someone else” . . . likes to work on cars . . . favorite subject: math . . .fa¬ vorite teacher: Mr. Taberski . . . out¬ side work as a plumber and a mechanic . . . outstanding memory: beating Wayland in 1976 . . . wills to the school: his parking space . . . “Hey what’s happening?” IANTHE THALIA ZANNETOS July 23 164 Country Drive Something about the harbor lights is calling me, Back to some Jamaican Bay, Doesn’t seem so far away, Keep the change But I’ll repay these memories. Boz Scaggs To believe your own thought, to believe that what is true for you in your private heart is true for all men — that is genius. Ralph Waldo Emerson WILLIAM ZIEFF March 3 10 Kingsbury Lane Shower the people you love with love, Show them the way that you feel. Things are gonna be much better If you only will. J.T. JUDI ZIMBLE May 18 605 South Avenue Now here we are At the end of that long road, It seems to have come to soon. I feel as if I’m in the middle Wanting to see new things But wanting to stay, too. Unknown If you do not understand my silence, how can you understand my words. Unknown 70 MISSING SENIORS Robert Florio Duncan Frazer Mary Roy Chris Ryan Jack Schwarzkopf Edward Williams 71 SUZANNE W. FONDA December 15 15 Brook Road My interest is in the future — because I’m going to spend the rest of my life there. Charles F. Kettering The only way to have a friend is to be one. Unknown EARLY GRADUATE BRIAN CISTULLI January 23 589 Wellesley Street Who are these children Who scheme and run wild Who speak with their wings And the way that they smile What are the secrets They trace in the sky And why do you tremble Each time they ride by Throw out your gold teeth And see how they roll The answer they reveal Life is unreal Walter Becker and Donald Fagen EARLY GRADUATE 72 NICK MAHER December 15 256 Boston Post Road Then it is time to get up. Give me my glas¬ ses. No, not my reading glasses, I want to look out. I want to see. Dylan Thomas The secret of life is enjoying the passage of time. James Taylor Failure to understand this principle is perhaps one of the most serious sources of fallacy likely to affect statistical studies by those who are not thoroughly aquainted with the morphology of the skeletal ele¬ ments with which they are dealing. W. E. Le Gros Clark EARLY GRADUATE DONNA VANCOTT January 10 131 Sherburn Circle And If I am immortal I’m no better My span of pain and pleasure No more sweet. However long I live I live a lifetime And that, however brief, Is yet complete. EARLY GRADUATE SARAH TULLOSS February 4 433 Concord Street Paint a pretty smile, Each day lovin’ Is a blessing, Never let it fade away, It’s all about love. Maurice White EARLY GRADUATE 73 JjSP C. Johnston B. Krakauer C. Wu T.J. Costello Y. Alphas B. Yao M. Stephens, L. Stephens W. Behringer D. Grant B. Bell L to R: G. Green, D. Jacoby, D. Naegele, L. Schwartz, W. Chapman, R. Rasmus¬ sen, B. Kanzer. N. Messing L. Bockweg P. Penfield I. Zannetos 74 L. Smith B. Zieff A. Watson L. DiStefano FIRST ROW, L to R: L. Nickerson, T. Mansfield, Coach J. Fisher, K. Harris, D. Goode. SECOND ROW: J. Pope, A. Bromfield, V. Weir, C. Morris, C. MacKenzie, T. Fisher. 7th Grade Field Hockey Team S. Chandler K. Buonato J. Moses K. MacDonnell A. Aftandilian J. Tierney J. Hocking M. Noble D. Martin L. Frank L. Fields K. Harris 75 RECOGNITION Even the best of us prove fallible at times and Joe Jordan is no exception to the rule. In spite of being the father of a member of the class of 1978, Mr. Jordan remains an effective and dedicated teacher. His fellow workers respect him and his students share in his en¬ thusiasm for chemistry. Energetic and cheerful, he always has a smile for everyone; and never begrudges the long hours that he devotes to helping students learn. The excellence with which Mr. Jordan commands his field makes him one of the more notable faculty members at Weston High School. RECOGNITION We devote this page to the recognition of a very spe¬ cial person at Weston High School — Gus, everyone’s favorite janitor. Gus has earned the respect of everyone who knows him. In a profession not often honored, he has worked unselfishly for almost nine years, making our school a better place in which to work. Though he might on oc¬ casion, jokingly describe himself as a “zookeeper in charge of the animals,’’ Gus enjoys being with young people and they like his company; perpetual good humor combined with quick wit imparted with a twin¬ kling eye. Thank-you Earle DeMerritt, for the many years you have dedicated to Weston. The class of 1978 wishes you the best of luck for the future. ADMINISTRATION 80 BRUCE MACDONALD Program Director THE ARTS BRUCE HERMAN Art RONALD J. MORI Director of Music IONA NICKESON Home Economics 81 CHARLOTTE SHOEMAKER Art BUSINESS EDUCATION THOMAS MAMOS 82 ENGLISH ELEANOR BROWN English Aide JOHN BARCLAY ROBERT FRANK ANNETTE BUSSE JAMES HARTMANN CHARLES S. HATCH Department Head 83 DOROTHY G. RAYMOND NORMAN M. KATZ GEORGE W. MICKUS ROBERT V. WALKER 84 MAJORIE STEIN LANGUAGES MARGARET W. FERNALD Latin FOREIGN NICOLE G. ENGBORG French MARGARET FREEDMAN Foreign Language Aide JANET L. GHATTAS French BARBARA B. HAGGERTY French ANGELA HEPTNER Spanish 85 NATALIA KAKTINS Latin, Russian ANTHONY SAMMARCO Spanish SHELDON STERNBURG Spanish JANET M. WOHLERS Department Head, French JOSEPH ROCHE French JEANNE SAUNDERS Language Lab Aide GUIDANCE DONALD M. DUNBAR GRANVILLE HARRIS JOSEPH EMERSON Alternate Studies Coordinator, History MARY FRENNING JERRY POLLOK 87 MARIE MacRAE Guidance Aide JUDITH SHANKAR Guidance Aide PAULINE WHITTEMORE Guidance Aide LIBRARY JOSEPHINE MACLEOD Librarian EVELYN O’CONNOR, HELEN PHINNEY, NORMA CAIL, ELIZABETH MOODIE Library Aides 88 JOANNE MORTON Audio-Visual INDUSTRIAL ARTS DONALD M. DUNCAN Department Head ARNOLD F. SANTOSPAGO MICHAEL SHEPARD TERRY J. VEITCH MATHEMATICS DANIEL J. CRONIN ANNE CARPENTER Aide BEV WELLER BROWN JOSEPH AIETA WALTER J. FIELDS 90 •• tti • MARTHA ZELINKA 91 PHYSICAL EDUCATION MARIE BUTERA DAVID BALDANZA ELIE COSGROVE HOWIE NEILD GEORGE HARRIS ROBERT STARMER Department Head SCIENCE BARBARA BENFIELD Biology ROBERT C. BOUCHER Chemistry G. BLAKESLEE Biology DONALD J. BURKE Physics RUSSELL HENSEL Science, Physics 93 JOSEPH E. JORDAN Chemistry SUSAN MAJORS Biology IRV MARSDEN Department Head LAWRENCE A. NILSON Biology NANCY NANCE Science Aide JOYCE SCHWARTZ Biology SOCIAL STUDIES RICHARD FRESE LEE MARSH PETER E. HALL C NANCY COX CYNTHIA NAUGER Social Studies Aide 9.5 3 JOSEPH VEROVSEK JOHN C. WILLIAMS Department Head SKILLS CENTER PETER TABERSKI 96 EDITH ASQUITH Main Office Aide f Study Hall Supervisor FLORENCE GRATCY Attendance Office Aide EVELYN MORIARTY Bookkeeper MARY OLSON Principal’s Secretary CECILE SULLIVAN Nurse ELDA WOODBURY Attendance Office Aide 97 -r JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS. T to B: Rob Proven- zano, Debbie Haberlin, Mr. Hatch, Class Adviser; Vicki Thomas, Barbie King. JUNIORS FIRST ROW, L to R: Stephanie King, Maura O’Gorman, Josie Bryant. SEC¬ OND ROW: Ann Bumpus, Barbara King, Polly Wolf. THIRD ROW: Cathy McEnroe, Debbie Haberlin. L to R: Doug Vautour, Jim Bowden, Tom Shores, Doug Roth, Dan Pollock, Richard Kassirer, Perrin Gardent. L to R: Jethro Kaplan, Led Wilson, Steely Jacobs, Pink Kelly. 100 L to R: Mike Schafer, Alan Reilly, Andy Espo, Mike Hastings, Hunter Moore. FIRST ROW, L to R: Ginny Vogt, Beth Murphy, Christy Sutherland. SECOND ROW: Robin Campbell, Carolyn Supple, Clare Sullivan, Maria Liu. FIRST ROW, R to L: Pat Fallon, Karen Schwartz, Kathy Hargreaves, Laurie Knight. SECOND ROW: Wendy Burger, Ann Delong, Mari-Ann Daoud. THIRD ROW: Anne Van Dusen, Sarah Ginzler, Amy Grover. L to R: Tom Funkhouser, Jim Breyer, Nick Maher, Scott Brown. 101 FIRST ROW, L to R: Bill O’Connell, Ueker, Craig Leach, David Uhlir. SECOND ROW: John Wathne, David Breen, Rick Nahigian, John Musinsky. FIRST ROW, L to R: Susan Patraiko, Jenny Moore. SECOND ROW: Beethoven, Joan R. Harrison, Lisa Bromfield. THIRD ROW: Katy MacDonnell, Ali¬ son Stiles, Joan Glynn. L to R: Jon Long, Dan Isaacs, Dick Stanton, Hans Stahl. L to R: Blake LeBaron, Tom McKenna, Greg Gorgone, Rob Provenzano, Hugh Kelly, John Hancock. 102 FIRST ROW, L to R: Rene Nazar, Janet Sullivan. SECOND ROW: Marianna Whitney, Meg Atkinson, Nannette Quigley. L to R: Lisa Lipson, Sharon Treutel, Ricki Berman, Monica Galligan. L to R: Mark Hersum, Steve Jones, Brad Harmon, David Harri¬ son, Roger Weir, Bill Marsh. 103 FIRST ROW, L to R: Dede Barnes, Valorie Bussey, Sue Breen. SECOND ROW: Laurie Cameron, Penny Dotter, Francine Bus¬ sey, Sylvie Roguzac, Cindy Farina. L to R: Sally Vernon, Wendy Jones, Tracey Nickerson, Beth Cutter, Kathy Spencer, Tricia Keating, Marcy Lynch. 104 FIRST ROW, L to R: Elaine Anderson, Joanne Condakes, Emily Jacobs, Cynthia Earle. SEC¬ OND ROW: Lindsay Burke, Addie Fiske, Francesca Den Hartog, Viki Thomas. FIRST ROW, L to R: Ken E. Parker, Glenn E. Engler, Jenny E. Bell, Alexandra E. Gampel. SECOND ROW: Russell E. Forman, Susan E. Katz, Richard E. Zieff, Glen E. Goddard, Edmund E. Baghdady. L to R: Tom Kinahan, Ed Lowrie, Tom Rosato, Steve Smith. L to R: Mark Cahill, Karen Nyman, Carol Gilbert, Laurie Zimble, Sally Ferguson, Kelly Randle, Kim Miller, Sue Proctor, Larry Watts. R to L: Jon Seamans, Jono Goldstein, Andy Whitney, Hal Clifford, Tom Vin- ing- 105 L to R: Marci Lesnick, Lynda Schlosberg, Susan Ritvo, Sarah McLean, Michelle Wildi. L to R: Bruce Cohen, Mark Schafer, Lee Marsh, Billy Botticelli. 106 107 108 109 SOPHOMORES SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS. L to R: Karen Wechsler, Matt Costello, Tammy Steere, Meredith Taylor. L to R: Beth Moses, Jenni Hill, Ann McBride, Tracey Kaplan, Kathy Cleary. FIRST ROW, L to R: Cindy Gibb, Beth Trant, Wendi Messing. SECOND ROW: Meredith Falvey, Lisa Coller, Jerilyn Dyer, Holly Tomkins, Shari Siegel. THIRD ROW: Chris Morrison, Carol Cremmen. 110 L to R: Marvella Mitchell, Keith Gupton, Marie DaRosa, Frederick Washington, Beverly Clark, Darryl Baynes, Chris Hill, Myric Thompson, Paul Locker, Brenda McMillan. L to R: Alex Barnett, Chris Duryea, Fred Lepine, David Rines, “Hoot” Gibson, Carl Grunbaum. FIRST ROW, L to R: Jane Clabault, Karen Fisher, Andrea Saunders, Ruth Kaplan. SECOND ROW: Gail Haberlin, Melissa MacDonnell, Missy Vitello, Tammy Steere, Stephanie Burke, Linda Mack. L to R: Peter Higgins, Dino Iafrate, Gary Defina, Dave Collins, Conrad Dobler, Paul Laska, John Fallon, Brad Dow. Ill FIRST ROW, L to R: Paul Saltzman, Jeff Hazen, Larry Belvin, Brooks “Nose” Nelson. SECOND ROW: Dave Zraket, Scott Duncan, Vin Bowhers, John Charpie, Phill Argyris, Jon Melone. L to R: Dana Roberts, Melinda Green, Amy Silverman, Andrea Foster. FIRST ROW, L to R: Nicola Ginzler, Ginger Cox. SECOND ROW: Sherry Welch, Jennifer Eddy, Kris Hoehler, Meredith Taylor, Molly Pyle. 112 FIRST ROW, L to R: Peter “Tank” Dohlman, Tony “Tank” Catlin, Tom “F $@ ! Tank” Colt, Dave “Tank” Lennon, Keith “Tank” Rogal. SECOND ROW: Tom “Tank” Sandson, Kent “Tank” Nissenbaum. L. to R: Chris “9” Hargreaves, Matthew “No Show” Costello, Ed “000” Coburn, John “Size 9 V 2 ” Birath, Ned “69 XL” Kerwin. L to R: Carol Cremmen, Tracy Kane, Wendi Messing, Kathryn Alphas, Beth Trant. FIRST ROW, L to R: Sharon Cope, Mary Wright, Denise Pearl. SECOND ROW: Katerina Krek, Beth Nyhan, Amy L. Schapiro, Ann Crafts. 113 L to R: Beverly Clark, Mr. Garland, Maria DeRosa, Myric Thompson, Marvella Mitchell, Brenda McMillan, Mia Beese. SITTING: Karen Horner. FIRST ROW, L to R: Shauna Donahue, Cindy Gibb, Jerilyn Dyer, Carol Cremmen. SECOND ROW: Jody Shulman, Meredith Falvey, Lisa Col- ler. THIRD ROW: Carolina Caldini, Wendi Mes¬ sing. L to R: Greg Gibson, Peter Murphy, David Mosvenzadeh, Matthew Shannon. FIRST ROW, L to R: Pam Rice, Lisa Woodbury, Debbie Murray, Audrey Fishman, Jennifer Slifka. SECOND ROW: Celeste Gallagher, Ellen Carlman, Mary Crouch, Kathy Bumpus, Mary Regan, Susan Cain. 114 FIRST ROW, L to R: Dave Murray, David Keery, Charlie Moore. SECOND ROW: Dave Roberts, Mike Kanfer, Paul Kerwin, Karl Blatt, John Sommers, Brian Noble. FIRST ROW, L to R: John Delaney, Greg Brown. SECOND ROW: Gregg Dillaway, Adam Sweet, Brian MacDonald, Richard DeVito. FIRST ROW, L to R: Charlie Taylor, Alan Norquist, Scott Tarbox. SECOND ROW: Kurt Leisman, Bob Prifti, Phil To- lentino, Richard Oldach. 115 FIRST ROW, L to R: Diane Boothroyd, Sylvia Guild, Leslie Ellis, Jayne Kurkjian, Sue Haberstroh. SECOND ROW: Lisa Yeonopous, Karen Wechsler, Alison Earle, Tricia Kaneb. L to R: Sonia Gurevitz, Andrea Foster, Stacey Oelgeschlager, Sharyn Kaplan, Peggy Kirchner, Young-Ju Bae, Lisa Govan. FIRST ROW, L to R: Alexandra Morrison, Kit Williams. SEC¬ OND ROW: Sue Pannier, Kim Moran, Martha Dupee. THIRD ROW: Mariam Docrat, Pam Reiman. 116 FIRST ROW, L to R: John Doyle, Pete Manning, Eric Wood. SECOND ROW: Mike Powers, Warren Fields, Stephen Strout, Downin D. Valle, Brian Kelly, Mike Luchetti, Steve Cooper, Mike Davis. 117 118 119 FRESHMEN FRESHMEN CLASS OFFICERS. L to R: Polly Dotter, Karen Gorgone, Tiara Chovance. Suspended: John Costello. L to R: Eric Duryea, John Krakauer, Steve Mollenkamp, Will Johnston, Mark Kasevich. L to R: Matthew Alston, Jeff Bruton, Nat Brown, Bobby Davis, Lewis Cohen, Piers Bowness, Ed Freedman. 120 FIRST ROW, L to R:Trip Young, Todd Azadian, Rob Collins, Bill Moore, Joe Giamo. Chris Van Wart, Brook Parker, George Knight, Peter Noonan, Rich Healey, Dan Davidson, Tom Cronin. FIRST ROW, L to R: Susie Funkhouser, Sue Patnode. SECOND ROW: Sharon Peck, Jean Nolan, Jackie Barbetti, Amy Berman, Janet Howard, Tracy Lang, Holly Higgins, Alexa Toney. L to R: Mike Wolf, Doug Schaeffer, Ricky Jacobs, Alan Proctor, Jeff Jasperse, Phillip Minervino. L to R: Robert Campobasso, Greg Safoyan, Guy Rufo, Robby Harris, Peter Keating, Rob Martino, Tom Wyman, Dan Jacobs, Doug Zimble. FIRST ROW, L to R: Suzanne Zraket, Robyn Waldmann, Julie Deady, Alexa Toney. SECOND ROW: Jennifer Schwartz, Tiara Chovance, Tracey Brown, Meri Burke, Kim Steere, Karen Ott. 191 L to R: Michael Spencer, Eric Hersum, David Yao, Tom Durkin. FIRST ROW, L to R: Susan McCahan, Ellen Smith, Kim High. SECOND ROW: Phebe Brown, Erica Powell, Daryl Bresler, Amy Nyman. L to R: Chip Bell, Rich Glazerman, Stephen Patton, Tom Healey, Todd Seale, Dudley Harris, Scott Carpenter. FIRST ROW, L to R: Miika Keerd, Kay Roy, Ellen Kamenstky, Tracey Anderson, Boo Lunt. SECOND ROW: Andrea Pulcini, Martha Katz, Sylvia Fallon, Karen Leach, Jane Reny, Maxine Segel. THIRD ROW: Stacey Arbetter, Julie Whitmore, Jeff Ackley, Kim Long, Sta cey Kanavos. 122 L to R: Liz Noble, Sue Goode, Karen Gorgone, Brenda Farina, Laura Strumph, Pam Melone, Polly Dotter. FIRST ROW, L to R: John Lynch, John Zabriskie, Mark Grunbaum. SECOND ROW: Doug Linde, Chip Williams, Stuart Burke. L to R: Donna Patey, Laurie Millian, Lisa Federico, Marjorie Stimpson, Chris Pollock, Lee Abbott, Karen Jackson. L to R: Rodney Chen, Jamie McLellan, Chip Barnes, Barry Zellen, Hal Fiske, Peter Espo, Robert Coburn. SEATED: David Hester. 123 L to R: Amy Harrison, Gretchen Harmon, Jan Watkins, Cindy Clark, Heather Morton, LaVel Crosby, Tanya Thomas. L to R: Bugs, Dan Cedrone. FIRST ROW, L to R: Erica Foster, Linda Pompa, Maura Nyhan. SECOND ROW: Cathy Jacobs, Carole O’Connell, Beth Altman, Cherine Kent, Cindee VanDerMeid. FIRST ROW, L to R: Elissa Sabin, Liane Harten, Gayle Fleischer. SECOND ROW: Lizzie Caruso, Judy Englander, Sarah Aldrich, Julie Paige. 124 FIRST ROW, L to R: Eric Shanabrook, Matt Siegel, Michael Daoud, Mark MacDonnell, Bill Shores. SECOND ROW: Tom Galligan, Greg Ryan, Tim Johnson. FIRST ROW, L to R: Sylvia Racca, Amy Ward, Betsy Allen. SECOND ROW: Carolyn Allansmith, Laura Jones, Heather Eddy. THIRD ROW: Katy Bushman, Andrea Sawyer, Anne Marie Baker. L to R: Suzi Shields, Sarah Martin. FIRST ROW, L to R: David North, Louie Leombruno, Peter Reilly, Mike Sweeney. SECOND ROW: Ted Burt, David Park, Rees Tulloss, Edmund Booth, Brian O’Leary, Peter Hirsch. 125 FIRST ROW, L to R: Stacey Crane, Steffi Carlson, Karen Sokel, Becky McEnroe. SECOND ROW: Sara Greenblott, Jenny Watral, Anne Trant, Susy Sheffer, Stephanie MacDonald, Tara Donahoe. L to R: Yvette Smith, Sharon Johnson, Lynne Johnson, Zena Graves, Betty Jean Jackson, Cheryl Searcy, Nancy Nobles, Deanna Vest, Leslie Thompson, Stephanie Jackson. L to R: John Supple, Winston McLean, John Costello, Benton Edwards. L to R: Beth Morton, Wendy Kassirer, Sheila O ' Hara, Cathy Gee, Andrea Muccini. 126 127 128 -■ 129 130 131 YEARBOOK FIRST ROW L to R: Zarry Zwartz, Marsha Bianchi, Cynthia Johnston, Henrik “James at 15” Dohlman, Mr. Hatch. SECOND “NO SHOW” ROW: Stephanie MacDonald, Maxine Segal, Wendy Jones, Kim Moran, Alexandra Morrison, Monica “future editor?” Galligan, Martha Dupee, Susan DiBartolomeis. THIRD ROW: Brooks “Nose” Nelson, Tom Breen, assistant chauffer; Norma McGuire, foreign correspondent; Paul Strumph, head chauffer; Alicia Vlachos. MIS¬ SING: Mrs. Nickeson. “Can you work today?” . . .“No”. . . Don’t let Cynthia or Louie do the stickies! . . . “Let’s go to Medieval Manor” . . . “Larry says that we don’t have any money!” . . . skipping records on WCOZ . . . Typical Senior question: “Is it OK if I pass in my picture and quotation now?” . . . Typical Yearbook response: “Well, the deadline WAS three months ago!”. . .“If I type‘Iget by with a little help from my friends’one more time I think I’ll throw up!!!” . . .good filing system — M for masking tape? . . . Northeastern “no-smoking” sign thanks to LEP and CM . . . “Henrik, where are the teacher pictures?” . . . Who’s going to go to Ahhhlington? . . . Taking Yearbook funds for “DRACULA, BABY” eh, Larry? . . . NOBODY WORKS . . . “How do we put a lock on the lower filing cabinet drawer?” . . . Did the MEEPS take our radio again? . . . This means WAR!!! . . . grilled peanut butter sandwiches and HD . . . Year- botch! . . . “Is the fan working?” . . . Bernadette broke again . . . “How are we going to get enough money for the party???” . . . Waaltham at 6:00 pm. Cynthia and Marsha — NICE!!! . . . “Larry, where is the artwork for the Ads?” . . . “HENRIK, WHERE ARE THE TEACHER PICTURES!!!!” . . . “Does anyone have any Fig Needhams or Pig Newdons” . . . IZ the Pig Newdon MASHER lives! . . . Playing with the books again Larr y? . . . “Do you have the pass key?” . . . “No, I’ve got my knife” . . . “I’ve got my license and screwdriver” . . . “Is there any more Correc- type?” . . . “No, Cynthia used it all” . . . Weekends in Marsha’s third floor or Cynthia’s dining room with a HUGE staff! . . . (Of 5!) . . . 134 STP FIRST ROW, L to R: Bill Marsh, Ingrid Stuart, Stephanie King. SECOND ROW: Ann Bailey, Mrs. Schwartz, Edmund Booth, Mr. Mickus, Missy Vit- ello, John Delaney. MISSING: Jenny Moore. LUX-LUMIERE-CBET-LUZ SAC Martha Katz, Freshman Representative; Ann Bailey, Presi¬ dent; Lindsay Burke, Junior Re presentative; Nina Cohen, Sophomore Representative. MISSING: Bob Buchanan, Vice President; Susan McGarry. FIRST ROW, L to R: Jennifer Moses, Wendi Messing, David Lennon, Joanne Condakes, Kris Hoehler, Ann Bailey, Sylvia Guild, Peter Espo, Hunter Moore, Laurie Knight. SECOND ROW: Meg Torrey, Lisa DeStefano, Kathy Davis, Tracey Brown, Meri Burke, Kim Steere, Rodney Chen, John Sommers. MISSING: Sally Vernon, Meg Atkinson, Cheryl Wu. FIRST ROW, L to R: Cecile Jorge, Cindy Kaplan, Claudia MacLeod, Monica Galligan. SECOND ROW: Nini Doyle, Maura O’Gorman, Mer- rilee Keller, Mrs. Fernald, Bill Marsh, Rick Nahigian. MISSING: Lynn Jones. STUDENT COUNCIL 135 MAELSTROM OBSERVATORY GROUP pi 1 W • Haa lil FIRST ROW, L to R: Lesley Saunders, Arthur Chin, Jono Goldstein, Mathew Costello. SECOND ROW: Todd Seale, Will Johnston, Tom McKenna, Laura Jones, Christian MacKenzie, John Delaney, Paul Bartlett. MISSING: Liz Park. FOREIGN EXCHANGE STUDENTS FIRST ROW, L to R: Cindy Hoehler, Liz Park, Patty Penfield. SECOND ROW: Pam Reiman, Karen Schwartz, Molly Pyle. THIRD ROW: Mary Welford, Monica Galligan, Donna Morey. MISSING: Miss Busse, Merrilee Keller, Ingrid Stuart, Donna Van Cott, Christy Sutherland, Sue McGarry. Jose Carlos Brustoloni, Porto Alegre, Brasil; Paul Miller, John Delaney, David Moavenzadeh, Greg Schapiro. Ann Delong, Cecile Jorge, Rhombas, France. MISSING: Jamy Buchanan, Teddi Galligan. 136 FRENCH CLUB SPANISH CLUB FIRST ROW, L to R: Ms. Ghattas, Ann Bailey, Cindy Bates, Christy Sutherland. SECOND ROW: Louise Gogel, Michelle Wildi, Kathy Hargreaves, Jenny Bell. MISSING: Betsy White, Patty McKenna. FIRST ROW, L to R: Dana Roberts, Ginger Cox, Maura O’Gorman, Alli¬ son Stiles, Mrs. Heptner. SECOND ROW: Tom McKenna, Elaine Ander¬ son, Kathy Spencer, Jono Goldstein, Polly Wolfe. THIRD ROW: Tom Rosato, Maria Liu, Jenny Bell, Carolyn Supple, Mike Schafer. MATH TEAM DEBATING FIRST ROW, L to R: John Charpie, Larry Belvin, Jennifer Eddy, Andrea Saunders, Peggv Kirschner, Stephanie Burke. SECOND ROW: Jon Seamans, Blake LeBaron, Jono Goldstein, Gail Haberlin, Meredith Taylor, Mark Saewert. THIRD ROW: Bill Zieff, Vin Weir. MISSING: Bob Buchananan, Greg Shapiro, David Charpie. FIRST ROW, L to R: John Harrison, Christian MacKenzie, Lourdes Tolentino. SECOND ROW: Mr. Frese, Bruce Brustoloni, Bill Kanzer, Paul Miller. 137 WLAF SURREALIST NEXIV TOP to BOTTOM: Paul Miller, Larry Schwartz, Bill Kanzer, Cindy Kaplan. FIRST ROW, L to R: Kaptain Kent, Dancin’ Romancin’ Sandson, Richard De¬ Vito, Brad Carpenter, Rich Kassirer, Dan Pollock. SECOND ROW: Peter Sur- rette, Sverige Swed, Stacey Arbetter, Gorgeous George, Ann Bailey, David Kap¬ lan. THIRD ROW: Win McLean, Super Sup, Beautiful Barton, Jim Bowden, Bruce Cohen. NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY LEFT to RIGHT: Cindy Hoehler, Claire Anderson, Vin Weir, Joan Brooke Moore, Amy Crafts, Mrs. Fernald. MISSING: Cheryl Wu, Bob Buchanan. MEEPS FIRST ROW, L to R: Jane Reny, Maxine Segal, Karen Schwartz, Dede Barnes, Young-Mi Bae, Missy Bachelder. SECOND ROW: Martha Katz, Mr. Barclay, Clare Sullivan, Holly Welch, Meg Torrey, Jessie Pecchenino, Beth Morton, Wendy Kassirer. THIRD ROW: Sue Katz, Emil N. Itself, Larry Schwartz, Ed Coburn, Paul Saltzman. OUTDOOR EXPLORERS FIRST ROW, L to R: Jeannine Doyle, Jeanne Wrean, Jeryl Trier, Cindy Rossi, Lynn Jones, Lesley Saunders, Barbie King. SECOND ROW: Maura O’Gorman, Karen Sokel, Ellen Kamentsky, Jon Long, Arthur Chin, Adam Sweet, Betsy White. THIRD ROW: Mrs. Schwartz, Mr. Blakeslee, Jan Wat¬ kins, Julie Whitmore, Stephanie Burke, Lindsay Burke, Addie Fiske, Ann Bailey, Peter Dohlman, John Wathne, Rick Nahigian, Carl Grunbaum, Blake LeBaron. MISSING: Sue Belsky, Ann Roy, Kay Roy, Matt Costello, Fred Jordan, Cheryl Wu, Dan Whitmore. ART CLUB CREATURE CORPS FIRST ROW, L to R: Ellen Kamentsky with Houdini, Chris Duryea. SECOND ROW: Fred LePine, Adam Sweet. L to R: Mrs. Hatch, Beth Titsworth, Anne Peberdy, Caroline Ward, Jean Chandler, Vikki Thomas, Karen Sokel, Lourdes Tolentino, Young-Ju Bae, Hilary Queen, Ginger Cox. GRASSROOTS SITTING: Robert Davis, Christian MacKenzie. SECOND ROW: Henrik Dohlman, Mr. Frank, Joan Moore, Pam Foster, Paul Strumph, Lourdes Tolentino. FOLK DANCING FIRST ROW, L to R: Lydia Krek, Denise Pearl, Katarina Krek. SECOND ROW: Julie Isaacs, Joan Glynn, Susan DiBartolomeis, Alicia Vlachos, Amy Schapiro. 140 141 Mb ' “THE MAD WOMAN OF CHAILLOT” CAST The Waiter . The Prospector . The President . The Baron . The Street Singer . The Ragpicker . The Deaf-Mute . Irma . The Shoelace Peddler The Broker . The Street fuggler . Dr. Jardin . Countess Aurelia. The Madwoman of Chaillot .John Tariot . . Thomas Sweet . Matthew Savitz . .. David Kaplan . . . John Charpie .... Keith Rogal . . Robert Coburn Lisa Yeonopolos .. . Richard Zieff . . David Charpie . Kenneth Parker . .. Glenn Engler .Leslie Ellis The Policeman . Pierre . The Sergeant . The Sewer-Man . Mme. Constance . The Madwoman of Passy Richard Glazerman .Alan Norquist . .. Edward Coburn .Paul Miller . . . Donna Van Cott Mille. Gabrielle .Joan Brooke Moore The Madwoman of St. Sulpice Mme. Josephine .Jennifer Moses The Madwoman of La Concorde 142 143 MARCHING BAND THE WESTON HIGH SCHOOL MARCHING BAND AND FLAG TEAM FLUTES PICCOLOS Lisa Mercuri Wendy Behringer Anne Van Dusen Polly Wolf Missy Bachelder Peggy Kirschner Jennifer Eddy Andrea Foster Robin Waldmann Janet McGarry Janet Howard Derryl Bressler Amy Harrison Martha Katz Karen Ott Ellen Smith CLARINETS Alan Richardson Katy MacDonnell Nanete Quigley Dede Barnes Gail Haberlin Tom Sandson Sherry Welch Bill Shores Cindy Vandermeid Kim Steere Jenny Schwartz Stephen Mollenkamp Elizabeth Morton SAXES Thomas Rosato Penny Dotter Arnold Barnes Rebbeca McEnroe Lisa DiStefano Brian DeRusha Ann Bumpus Mark MacDonnell FRENCH HORNS Andy Whitney Phill Argyris John Musinsky BELLS Holly Welch Debbie Haberlin Nina Cohen CORNETS Lance Dillaway Ken Parker Wendy Burger Brian MacDonald Cynthia Johnston Cheryl Wu Thomas Galligan Patty Penfield Lesley Saunders Andy Doyle James Richardson TROMBONES John Tariot Tom Colt Jeannine Doyle Ianthe Zannetos Amy Grover Laura Stephens Wendy Welch Stephen Strout BARITONE HORN Tom Kinahan Doug DeRusha BASSES Claude Valle Jon Seamans PERCUSSION Peter Goldstein Ed Cobum Ned Kerwin Hugh Young Scott Duncan Paul Bartlett Sue Breen Karne Schwartz FLAG TEAM Suzanne Fonda Stacey Kanavos Marianne Federico Diane Boothroyd Mary Wright Valorie Bussey Martha Dupee Beth Titsworth Karen Mosher Ronald Mori, Director Scott Tucker, Assistant Susan Philputt, Assistant 144 MAJORETTES FIRST ROW, L to R: Jenny Bell, Linda Schlosberg, Nanci Messing, Co-Captain; Coralie Campobasso, Co-Captain; Ginny Vogt, Carolyn Supple. SECOND ROW: Linda Segal, Andy Saunders, Susan Pannier, Melissa MacDonnell, Emily Rowe, Sharon Cope. 145 CONCERT BAND Band Officers. L to R: Wendy Behringer, President; Brian DeRusha, Vice-President; Amy Grover, Librarian; Missing: Anne Van Dusen, Librarian. - 146 ORCHESTRA Orchestra Officers. Fred Jordan, President; Nini Doyle, Vice-President; Coralie Campobasso, Librarian; Cheryl Wu, Librarian. 147 GIRLS GLEE CLUB MIXED CHOIR Ti 148 THIRD EDITION CHORAL OFFICERS. L to R: Holly Welch, Barbie King, Debbie Haberlin, Clare Sullivan, Carolyn Supple, Wendy Behringer, Kathy Davis, Cindy Hoehler. Missing: Ned Ker- win, Sally Vernon, Ginny Vogt, Amy Grover, Glenn Engler. 149 FIELD HOCKEY VARSITY. FIRST ROW, L to R: Allison Earle, Molly Pyle, Amy Crafts, Ann Watson, Jean Mollenkamp, Marilyn Noble, Sue Caples, Abby Moulton, Leslie Fields. SECOND ROW: Miss Butera, Cynthia Earle, Francesca DenHartog, Jill Tierney, Heather Phillips, Ianthe Zannetos, Lisa DiStefano, Patty Penfield, Beth Tenca, Wendy Jones, Tracey Nickerson, Kathy Spencer, Janet Sullivan. TRI-CAPTAINS. Jean Mollenkamp, Marilyn No¬ ble, Sue Caples. DUAL COUNTY LEAGUE CHAMPIONS EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS CHAMPIONS MASSACHUSETTS STATE CHAMPIONS The Boston Globe awarded: Miss Butera — Coach of the Year Lisa DiStefano — Most Valuable Player Amy Crafts — named to the All-Star Team. WESTON OPPONENT 5 BEDFORD 0 4 WAYLAND 0 5 ACTON-BOXBORO 0 3 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 0 6 BROOKLINE 0 2 CONCORD-CARLISLE 0 7 NEWTON-SOUTH 0 2 BEDFORD 0 0 WAYLAND 0 3 ACTON-BOXBORO 0 1 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 2 2 NEWTON-NORTH 0 0 CONCORD-CARLISLE 0 6 NEWTON-SOUTH 0 152 Summer Camp . . . Who’s Barracuda? . . . get your booties on and have a go . . . hark a lark . . . tryouts in August . . . DOMINATION . . . POSTERS . . . Ground Round . . . who’s behind the mask? . . . Marilyn is that you?? . . . 10 game unscored upon streak! . . . 47 league goals . . . stereo system in the locker room . . . “Courtney will you SHUT UP!” . . . “This is the most important game of the season” . . . who put the toilet paper on Wayland’s field again? . . . where’s Ann? . . . Chateau for dinner . . . Happy Birthday Marie . . . DCL Champions . . . lolly pops . . . don’t forget your mouth¬ guards! . . . STATES AGAIN . . . making it a tradition!! ' . . . Saturday practice . . . ONCE IS NOT ENOUGH. . . “Make all your dreams come true for me and you” . . . NORTH SECTIONAL CHAMPI¬ ONS . . . lucky rainbow . . . early dismissals . . . MASSACHUSETTS STATE CHAMPIONS . . . victory party . . . champagne and cigars . . . THE YEAR OF THE CAT . . . WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS . . . free dancing lessons from Molly and Janet . . . movies ... Is there a doctor in the house? . . . weekend at the Cape with Marie and Ellie . . . broken cars . . . down in the basement, out on the porch . . . imitations . . . bean de noodle soup, mademoiselle? . . . Celebration Banquet . . . If I can’t be a hockey player . . . “It was a good time, it was the best time. It was a short time, but such a good time.” 153 JUNIOR VARSITY. FIRST, L to R: Sally Vernon, Debbie Murray. SECOND ROW: Beth Cutter, Ruth Kaplan, Pam Reiman, Clare Sullivan, Jayne Kurkjian, Lisa Woodbury, Beth Trant, Ellen Carlman. THIRD ROW: Jody Shulman, Holly Thompkins, Kathryn Alphas, Sue Haberstroh, Rene Nazar, Kelly Randle, Beth Nyhan, Laurie Gieselman, Sue Breen, Ms. Cosgrove. FRESHMEN. FIRST ROW, L to R: Polly Dotter, Karen Gorgone, Cindy Clarke, Liz Noble, Anne Trant, Karen Ott, Amy Nyhan, Tracey Brown. SECOND ROW: Laura Strumph, Tara Donahoe, Sheila O’Hara, Kim Steere, Stacey Crane, Susan Goode, Jenny Watral, Andrea Muccini, Mrs. Healey. 154 BOYS’ SOCCER VARSITY. FIRST ROW, L to R: Paul Nolan, Robert Buchanan, Mark Zabriskie, Ara Aftandilian, Tri-Captain; Fred Jordan, Tri-Captain; Robert McBride, Tri-Captain; Brian Collins, William Kanzer. SECOND ROW: Coach Foley, Andy Kaplan, Mike Schafer, Mike blasting, Dan Caples, Jim Breyer, Nick Maher, Paul Laska, Mark Schafer. THIRD ROW: Greg Shapiro, Jose Brustoloni, Jim Fallon, Tom Vining, Ronnie Quan. WESTON OPPONENT 1 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 0 2 NEWTON SOUTH 1 3 WESTWOOD 0 1 CONCORD-CARLISLE 1 4 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 0 0 WAYLAND 0 3 BEDFORD 1 3 ACTON 2 5 NEWTON SOUTH 1 11 ST. SEBASTIAN 0 2 CONCORD-CARLISLE 0 1 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 0 1 WAYLAND 0 1 BEDFORD 1 155 GIRLS’ SOCCER VARSITY. FIRST ROW, L to R: Anne Johnson, Lori Pollock, Julia Isaacs, Kiefer Honthumb holding Sue, Cheryl Wu, Co-Captain; Jeanne Wrean, Co-Captain; Lizzie Park, Andrea Fish, Joanne Reilly, Cindy Bates. SECOND ROW: Mary Regan, Carol Gilbert, Alexandra Turner, Elbe Anderson, Sandy Gampel. JUNIOR VARSITY. FIRST ROW, L to R: Kit Williams, Meredith Taylor, Marianna Whitney, Nanette Quigley, Co-Captain; Gail Haberlin, Co-Captain; Pat Fallon, Karen Wechsler. SECOND ROW: Stacey Oelgeshlager, Cathy Gee, Maura Nyhan, Kathy Jacobs, Nicola Ginzler. 156 WESTON OPPONENT 7 NEWTON SOUTH 3 0 CONCORD-CARLISLE 3 1 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 0 3 WAYLAND 3 0 WELLESLEY 4 4 BEDFORD 0 2 NEWTON SOUTH 2 1 LEXINGTON 2 1 CONCORD-CARLISLE 2 1 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 0 6 WAYLAND 2 3 BEDFORD 1 157 CROSS COUNTRY FIRST ROW, L to R: Terry Phillips, David Elmes, Bruce Bell, Averill Bromfield, James Sarkisian, Captain; Mark Saewert, John Jasperse, Paul Abercrombie, Nick Green. SECOND ROW: Coach Donald Duncan, John Wathne, Edmund Baghdady, Rick Nahi- gian, Brad Harmon, Mark Hersum, Scott Duhaime, Glen Goddard. THIRD ROW: John Musinsky, Sam Ecker, Laura Stephens, Paula Graunas, Marcy Lynch, Maura O’Gorman, Vince Bowhers, Larry Belvin. FOURTH ROW: Phill Argyris, Jeff Jasperse, Jim Concannon, Phil Minervino, Matt Siegel, Arnold Barnes, fifth row; Tom Colt, Jon Seamans, Scott Duncan. WESTON OPPONENT 27 BEDFORD 30 30 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 26 27 WAYLAND 28 44 NEWTON SOUTH 19 49 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 15 26 CONCORD-CARLISLE 29 158 159 FOOTBALL VARSITY AND JUNIOR VARSITY. FIRST ROW, L to R: Coach Neild, John Parla, David Kulow, Bill Zieff, Yanni Alphas, Scott Chandler, Tri-Captain; Mike Moran, Tri-Captain; Ken MacDonnell, Tri-Captain; Tom Zagami, Jeff Spencer, Chris Kelly, David Goode, Coach Hall. SECOND ROW: Coach Merullo, Peter Sennott, Jody Ferrelli, Ken Harris, Greg Robbins, Robert Bowhers, Chuck Grant, Tom Brown, Tom Funkhouser, Hugh Kelly, Guy Davidson, Jon Clifton, Coach Morrill. THIRD ROW: Andy Levin, Dave Breen, Bob Kayser, Scott Brown, Paul VanWart, Greg Gorgone, Rob Provenzano, Tom Wilder, Tony Corrado, William Boticelli, Bob Davis. FOURTH ROW: Mike Fraser, Tom Kinahan, Peter Higgins, Kurt Leisman, Charlie Moore, Dave Collins, Mike Powers, Warren Fields, Davod Kaye. FIFTH ROW: Michael Kanfer, Richard Oldach, Keith Gupton, John Sommers, Philip Tolentino, Jon Melone, David Uhlir, Brian Kelly. MISSING: Chris Cleary. FRESHMAN. FIRST ROW, L to R: Coach Taberski, Brook Parker, Todd Azadian, Phil Sullivan, Trip Young, Peter Noonan, Winston McLean, Coach Dubie. SECOND ROW: William Moore, Rees Tulloss, Brian O Leary, David Hester, Guy Rufo, Rob Harris, Chris VanWart. THIRD ROW: Robert Campobasso, Tom Ullian, Michael Daoud, Tom Healy, Joe Giamo, Dan Cedrone, Mark McDonnell. FOURTH ROW: Tom Wyman, Dan Jacobs, Peter Reilly, Rich Healy, Rob Collins. 160 WESTON OPPONENT 19 HOLLISTON 0 24 NEWTON SOUTH 0 0 HULL 21 6 RINDGE TECH 13 25 FOXBORO 14 12 CONCORD-CARLISLE 10 14 BEDFORD 0 0 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 7 9 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 6 9 WAYLAND 0 FOOTBALL CHEERLEADERS. FIRST ROW, L to R: Marie Wood, Claire Ander¬ son, Sabe Jones. SECOND ROW: Lynn Jones, Laurie Knott, Kim Buonato, Doo¬ dle Grant, Robin Campbell, Susan Patraiko. 161 BOYS’ BASKETBALL VARSITY. FIRST ROW, L to R: Doug Atamian, Mark Schafer, Mike Moran, Scott Chandler, Scott Wilson, Chad Hale. SECOND ROW: Steve Smith, Tom Vining, Doug Roth, Rob Pease, Tony Franchi, John Liu, Coach Foster. JUNIOR VARSITY. FIRST ROW, L to R: Keith Rogal, Craig Leach, Keith Gupton, Kenny Powell, Mark Williams. SECOND ROW: Coach Pells, Chris Hill, Mike Kanfer, Richard Oldach, Peter Higgins, Bruce Cohen. 162 BASKETBALL CHEERLEADERS. CLOCKWISE: Sarah Greenblot, Francine Bussey, Martha Dupee, Linda Pompa, Valorie Bussey, Alison Stiles, Kim Moran, Sue Pannier, Sue Goode. WESTON OPPONENT 59 HOLLISTON 39 58 SCITUATE 65 55 WESTWOOD 53 30 DOVER-SHERBORN 72 72 MEDWAY 64 49 WELLESLEY 46 54 BEDFORD 59 62 MEDWAY 48 41 NEWTON-SOUTH 39 47 CONCORD-CARLISLE 35 56 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 60 61 WAYLAND 47 42 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 41 49 BEDFORD 55 66 DOVER-SHERBORN 61 60 NEWTON-SOUTH 51 41 WAYLAND 45 53 CONCORD-CARLISLE 53 68 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 45 40 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 64 ■— JL.__ 163 GIRLS’ BASKETBALL VARSITY. L to R: Joanne Reilly, Francesca DenHartog, Cynthia Earle, Beth Tenca, Marilyn Noble, Amy Crafts, Wendy Jones, Lisa DiStefano, Lexi Turner, Sue Caples. KNEELING: Mrs. Healey. JUNIOR VARSITY. FIRST ROW, L to R: Elaine Anderson, Marianna Whitney, Molly Pyle, Alison Earle, Melissa MacDonnell. SECOND ROW: Pam Reiman, Mary Regan, Meg Atkinson, Laurie Knight, Mrs. Janzen. FRESHMAN. FIRST ROW, L to R: Liz Noble, Carol O’Connell, Patti McKenna, Ju lie Deady, Andrea Muccini, Lynn Johnson. SECOND ROW: Janet McGarry, Janet Howard, Melissa Donovan, Susie Funkhouser, Diana Vest, Sheila O’Hara, Laval Crosby. MISSING: Sue Patnode. WESTON OPPONENT 53 MEDWAY 39 34 NEWTON-SOUTH 41 60 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 33 56 CONCORD-CARLISLE 49 41 WAYLAND 59 55 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 49 48 BEDFORD 67 50 NEWTON-SOUTH 34 43 WAYLAND 55 21 CONCORD-CARLISLE 47 48 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 32 37 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 36 165 SWIMMING FIRST ROW, L to R: Sabe Jones, Cindy Gibb, Bruce Ewen, Scott Connolly, T.J. Costello, Jeff North, Jan Watkins, Barbara King. SECOND ROW: Celeste Gallagher, Anne Van Dusen, Penny Dotter, Janet Sullivan, Cassie Chovance, Tiara Chovance, Jane Clabault, Cathy Jacobs. THIRD ROW: Claire Anderson, Lisa Bromfield, Tammy Steere, Bob Davis, Russell Forman, Tom McKenna, Jono Goldstein, Scott Tarbox, Chris Heargreaves, Coach Foley. FOURTH ROW: Coach Whitelaw, David North, Mark Kasevich, Steve Patton, Stuart Burke, Tom Cronin, Dan Jacobs, Greg Ryan, Bill Shores. FIFTH ROW: Hans Stahl, Tom Shores, Mike Hastings, Claude Valle, Dick Stanton, Mark Ewen, Hunter Moore. GREATER BOSTON SWIMMING LEAGUE RELAY CARNIVAL 694 pts. 1st Place BROWN UNIVERSITY INVITATIONAL MEET GREATER BOSTON SWIMMING LEAGUE 133 pts. 5th Place WESTERN CONFERENCE MEET 378 pts. 1st Place NORTHERN MASSACHUSETTS CHAMPIONSHIP MEET 112 pts. 3rd Place MASSACHUSETTS STATE CHAMPIONSHIP MEET NEW ENGLAND INTERSCHOLASTIC 11 pts. 22nd Place CHAMPIONSHIP MEET 8 pts. 25th Place 166 WESTON OPPONENT 113 CATHOLIC MEMORIAL 57 49 WALTHAM 34 105 NEWTON SOUTH 67 93 ATTLEBORO 79 30 GARDNER 47 110 B.C. HIGH 61 98 MILFORD 74 47 DON BOSCO 36 93 BELMONT 79 130 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 37 94 XAVERIAN 77 96 LEXINGTON 76 115 LEOMINSTER 57 102 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 70 100 BEDFORD 70 100 CONCORD-CARLISLE 72 167 WINTER TRACK FIRST ROW, L to R: John Jasperse, Vincent Perry, David Kulow, Lisa Farina, Tricia O’Hara, Marie Wood, Suzanne Coates, Jill Tierney, Paula Graunas. SECOND ROW: David Zraket, Scott Duncan, Bruce Bell, David Elmes, Averill Bromfield, Terry Phillips, James Sarkisian, Bob Bowhers, Jean Mollenkamp, Laura Stephens, Nini Doyle, Maura Nyhan, Brenda Farina. TFIIRD ROW: Jeff Hazen, Steven Mollenkamp, Jamie McLellan, Jon Melone, Greg Dillaway, Glen Goddard, Doug Vautour, Mark Hersum, Ed Lowrie, Gretchen Harmon, Jenny Bell, Carolyn Supple, Clare Sullivan, Marcy Lynch, Pam Hall. FOURTH ROW: Tom Colt, Vince Bowhers, Scott Duhaime, Brad Harmon, Rob Prifti, David McKenzie, Jeff Jasperse, Kathy McEnroe, Beth Nyhan, Cindy Farina, Pam Thrall, Pat Fallon, Coach Jim Moran. Coach Young and Coach Moran. WESTON OPPONENT 77 MATIGNON 9 54 BEDFORD 32 46 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 40 52 WAYLAND 34 49 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 37 41 NEWTON SOUTH 45 68 CONCORD-CARLISLE 18 WESTON OPPONENT 73 MATIGNON 8 59 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 27 52 WAYLAND 34 58 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 28 59 NEWTON SOUTH 27 49 CONCORD-CARLISLE 37 GIRLS’ TEAM PLACED 2nd IN ALL-STATE MEET BOYS’ TEAM AND GIRLS’ TEAM ALL-LEAGUE CHAMPIONS 168 WRESTLING FIRST ROW, L to R: ?, Rick Nahigian, Bruce Krakauer, Greg Shapiro, Jeff Reiman, David Uhlir, David Harrison. SECOND ROW: Coach Dubie, Chris Morris, Charlie Taylor, Lee Goddard, Paul Saltzman, David Lennon, Guy Davidson, Bob Kayser, Tom Sandson, Coach Baldanza. WESTON OPPONENT 24 FRAMINGHAM SOUTH 43 30 WINCHESTER 30 46 LEXINGTON 19 40 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 24 6 NEWTON SOUTH 57 49 CATHOLIC MEMORIAL 18 37 BELMONT 24 22 BROOKLINE 40 38 WAYLAND 18 28 AYER 26 WESTFORD TOURNAMENT 3rd Place DISTRICT TOURNAMENT 122 pts. 3rd Place STATE TOURNAMENT 38 V 2 pts. 10th Place Santo Anza and Greg Shapiro: Captains. 169 HOCKEY FIRST ROW, L to R: Danny Caples, Warren Fields, David Murray, Yanni Alphas, Ken Harris, Jody Ferrelli, Gary Defina, David Woodbury, Scott Page. SECOND ROW: Coach Sullivan, Mike Merino, Scott Brown, Gary Couts, Paul Donahue, Mike Powers, Mike Schaefer, Mark Cahill, Charlie Moore, Robbie Harris, Mark Stephens, Coach Frechette. 170 phas, Co-Captain. WESTON OPPONENT 7 MEDFIELD 4 5 MARLBORO 9 6 DOVER-SHERBORN 8 5 MILLIS 2 5 KEEFE-TECH 5 3 WAYLAND 6 8 NEWTON-SOUTH 4 2 BEDFORD 5 4 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 7 1 ACTON-BOXBOROUGH 6 2 CONCORD-CARLISLE 4 3 WAYLAND 8 8 NEWTON-SOUTH 3 4 BEDFORD 3 1 LINCOLN-SUDBURY 7 3 CONCORD-CARLISLE 6 HOCKEY CHEERLEADERS. FIRST ROW: Lisa Woodbury. SECOND ROW. L to R: Chris Morrison, Kathy Alphas, Kathy Cleary. THIRD ROW: Shauna Donahue, Betsy Pappas, Sue Haberstroh, Jean Crane, Ellen Luchetti, Carol Cremmen. 172 173 174 175 PATRONS Dr. and Mrs. J. Scott Abercrombie, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Leon J. Atamian Mr. and Mrs. David P. Bell Mr. and Mrs. Harold Breen Mr. and Mrs. A.B. Bianchi Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buonato Dr. and Mrs. J. Lincoln Cain Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Charpie Mr. and Mrs. D.J. Cleary Barbara and Arthur Clifton Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Collins Mr. and Mrs. John W. Costello Mr. and Mrs. Frederic A. Crafts, Jr. William F. Dawson Dr. and Mrs. Guy R. Dillaway Mr. and Mrs. Anthony DiStefano Dr. and Mrs. Claes Dohlman Robert and Roberta Duhaime Chuck and Barbra Elmes H.I. Ewen Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. Burton M Foster Donald P. Goldstein Halcott and Cornelia Grant Nancy N. Hall Richard A. Hall Mr. and Mrs. James R. Hocking Dr. and Mrs. B.J. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. William F. Johnston Mr. and Mrs William E. Katz Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Lewis j. Kleinrock Mr. and Mrs. William M. Knott The Knott Family Mr. and Mrs. Irving G. Marsden Mr. and Mrs. Hugh R. McBride Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Miller Mr. and Mrs.Robert Mooney Jonathan and Katherine Moore Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Morey Steve and Jean Moulton Mr. and Mrs. George D. Noble Dr. and Mrs. William H. Oldach Mv and Mrs. Thomas Page Mr. and Mrs. Chas. A. Pappas Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Peck Mr. and Mrs. Paul Penfield, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic S. Perry Mr. and Mrs. Allen J. Reilly 178 Dr. and Mrs. Seymour Saltzman Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Savitz Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Schapiro Joyce Schwartz Rex B. Shannon Mr. and Mrs. Fred Spencer Mr. and Mrs. H. Austin Starr Mr. and Mrs. Joel S. Strumph Dr. and Mrs. Roger H. Sweet Dr. and Mrs. Joseph I. Tenca Dr. Felipe I. Tolentino Mr. and Mrs. J. Allen Torrey Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wu Mr. and Mrs. Charles Zabriskie Dr. and Mrs. Zenon Zannetos BUSINESS PATRONS KASPER PILIBOSIAN WESTON CARD SHOP 91 Central Street, Wellesley 235-2440 464 Boston Post Road, Weston 893-6627 CENTRAL TAILORING CO. 399 Boston Post Road, Weston 894-1888 179 SPONSORS Mr. and Mrs. Duke Young Bae Mr. and Mrs. George P. Bates Dr. and Mrs. Glenn E. Behringer Carol and Harvey Berman Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Campobasso Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Caples Mr. and Mrs. John J. Cappello Mr. and Mrs. Hugh W. Chandler Arthur and Diana Coates Mr. and Mrs. David Colpitts Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Davis Henry DeRusha Mr. and Mrs. Arnold W. Doyle Mr. and Mrs. Angelo English Mr. and Mrs. Emil Florio Mr. and Mrs. John Goode Mr. and Mrs. James R. Hocking Mr. and Mrs. Sanford M. Isaacs Aubrey and Lois Jones Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Kaplan Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Kaufman Mr. and Mrs. C.E. Keller Carelton H. Klinck Dr. and Mrs. Robert F. Leach Mr. and Mrs. Dean LeBaron Nancy Luchetti Mr. and Mrs. John W. MacNeil Mr. and Mrs. Edward Marden Mr. and Mrs. David S. McLellan Meredyth and John Moses Mr. and Mrs. Rene R. Pannier Mr. and Mrs. James T. Park Mr. and Mrs. William M. Pease John and Joyce Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Wendall E. Phillips, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Saewert Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sarkisian John and Leorn Stuart Dr. and Mrs. Jerry Trier Mr. and Mrs. Vincent M. Weir Dorothy Welford Dr. and Mrs. R. Leonard White Mr. and Mrs. Cheng Yao Donation 180 181 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1978 aP £ ( £ | NO ) 1 ° 0% Think W Wilmot Whitney Inc. Weston Wayland Wellesley And Surrounding Communities COMPLETE REA ESTATE SERVIC 30 Colpitts Road Weston 899-1 650 Wilmot Whitney. Inc. ■Realtors MLS Congratulations to the Class of 1978 R. M. Bradley Co., Inc. 542 Boston Post Road Weston. Mass. 02193 Congratulations to All Seniors TEA GIFTS JEWELRY IDENTS EARRINGS Agents for Rubber Stamps and Name Tapes Repair of Jewelry and Beads Personalized Stationery and Informals KIEN CHUNG’S 502 Boston Post Road Phone: 894-4290 Sportswear Weston • Chestnut Hill Wellesley MacRae Insurance Agency, Inc. 481 Boston Post Rd., Weston 893-1500 HOME-AUTO-LIFE-BUSINESS CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CONGRATULATIONS TO VANESSA AND THE CLASS OF 1978 SALON VANESSA CLASS OF 1978 ED ABBOTT’S GULF SERVICE B. L. OGILVIE SONS INC. Established 1919 j Warren Avenue, Weston 894-1265 j Your One-Stop Home Center Building Materials — Fuel Cement Blocks Paneling Bird Feed Sand Roofing Paint Drainage Pipe Ladders Glass Fencing Lawn Mowers Tools Lumber Fertilizer Bolts Fir Timbers Dog Food Kitchen wares Finnish Pine Horse Feed Radios Red Wood Hay Firewood Plywood Shavings Fuel Oil Vic’s Weston Automotive, Inc. 899-0247 584 Rear Boston Post Rd. Weston 899-0799 Specializing in Foreign American Car Repair Machine Shop Service Complete State-Wide Towing CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1978 THE TRAVEL AGENCY Weston Center Prop. George M. Gordon 290 North Avenue Weston, Mass. 893-7460 INSTALLATION A lit CONDITIONING MAINTENANCE WESTON ELECTRIC INC. Edward Frothingliam MASTER ELECTRICIAN 596 Boston Post Rd. Weston, Mass. 899-0098 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1978 MR. AND MRS. A. SLIFKA CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1978 STATIONARY UNLIMITED 70 Boston Post Road Wayland CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1978 MR. AND MRS. ANTHONY A. FRANCHI A TOAST to the CLASS OF 1978 from Tv SEVEN-UP BOTTLING CO. 32 Freemont St. Needham Heights, Mass. 444-3100 8 ) WDOI TD T HC Traitors 596 BOSTON POST ROAD WESTON CENTER 894-1423 Member: (Treater Boston Real Estate Board Massachusetts Association of Realtors National Association of Realtors Realtors National Marketing Institute Multiple Listing Service OFFICE 891-1094 D. T. ZAGAMI SONS, INC. PLUMBING HEATING RESIDENTIAL and COMMERCIAL 54 DRABBINGTON WAY WESTON, MASS. 02193 GIFTS ANTIQUES DECORATING SERVICES THE chestnut shop WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02193 WESTON CENTER MALL C. RICHARD POWERS WESTON. MASS 02183 8 94-1 1 1 I 899-4331 AMERICAN REAL ESTATE ACADEMY LICENSED BY THE COMM. OF MASS. DEPT. OF EDUCATION Professional Preparation For Massachusetts Real Estate Brokers License Exam I Local Morning Evening Classes Theodore J. Vlachos, Director 771 Main Street, Waltham Tel. 893 -2832 J. IRVING CONNOLLY COUNTRY HOMES IN WESTON AND VICINITY 809 BOSTON POST ROAD WESTON 93 MASSACHUSETTS 894-5520 II BEST WISHES ’78 WILDCATS GRRRR THE ALLINSONS We are proud of the part Westwood Studios has played in the production of your yearbook. It is with this same pride in our work, and our interest in producing better portraits and candids that we hope you may call upon our services in the future. STUDIOS.INC. 218 Chestnut Street, Needham, Mass. 02192 Telephone 444-0042 Portraits, Wedding Candids, and Yearbook Photography BIANCHI AND JOHNSTON CORPORATION SENIOR INDEX PAUL ABERCROMBIE Winter Track 2,3,4 — Spring Track 2,3,4 — Cross Country 4. ARA AFT AND ILIAN Soccer 1,2,3, Tri-Captain 4 — Tennis 1,2,4 — Musical Cast 2,3 — Boys’ Glee Club 1,2 — Mixed Choir 1,2 — Third Edition 2. COURTNEY ALLINSON Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Lacrosse 1,2,3,4 — Class Treasurer 2,3 — Prom Committee 3 — Pancake Breakfast 4. YANNI ALPHAS Football 1,2,3,4 — Hockey 1,2,3, Captain 4 — Golf 1 — Prom Committee 3 — Variety Show 4. CLAIRE ANDERSON Girls’ Glee Club 3,4 — Mixed Choir 3,4 — Football Cheerleader 4 — Swim Team 4 — Spring Track 3,4 — National Honor Society 3,4. WENDY BEHRINGER Field Hockey 1 — Basketball 1 — Lacrosse 1,2,3,4 — Fall Play Crew 2,3,4 — Musical Crew 1,2 — Musical Cast 3,4 — Arts Festival 1,2 — Spring Fling 3 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3, Vice- President 4 — Mixed Choir 2,3, President 4 — Boys’ Glee Club President 4 — Third Edition President 4 — Northeast District Chorus 3,4 — Marching Band 1,2,3, President 4 — Concert Band 1,2,3, President 4 — Prom Committee 3 — National Honor Soci¬ ety 4. ALI BEST Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3 — Mixed Choir 2,3. MARSHA BIANCHI Photography Club 1 — Fall Play Crew 2 — Yearbook 1,2, Junior Editor 3, Co-Editor-in-Chief 4. BOB BOWHERS Football 1,2,3,4 — Winter Track 2,3,4 — Spring Track 1,2,3,4. TOM BROWN Football 3,4. BOB BUCHANAN Soccer 1,2,3,4 — WLAF 2 — Math Team 2,3,4 — SAC 3,4 — Grassroots 2. GREG BURKE Tennis 1,2,3,4 — Swim Team 2,3. SUSAN CAPLES Tennis 1,2,3,4 — Field Hockey Co-Captain 1,2,3, Tri-Captain 4 — Basketball Co-Captain 1,2,3, Co-Captain 4 — Student Council 1 — Prom Committee 3— Yearbook 4 — Concession Stand 4 — Donkey Basketball, Co-Chairman 4. EDIE CARLMAN Field Hockey 1,2,3. BRAD CARPENTER WLAF 1,2, Chief Engineer 3, General Manager 4 — Stage Band 1,2,3,4 — Ochestra 1,2,3,4 — Technicians Club 2,3,4 — Boys’ Glee Club 3,4 — Mixed Choir 3,4 — Lighting Crew 2,3,4 — Grass Roots 4. RICHARD CASO Wrestling 2. JEAN CHANDLER Whale Club 3,4 — Art Club 4. JON CLIFTON Football 2,3,4 — Baseball 1,2,3,4. SUZANNE COATES Field Hockey 1 — Winter Track 4. BRYON COLLINS Football 1,2 — Soccer 3,4 — Basketball 1 — Baseball 1,2,3,4 — Wrestling 2 — Prom Committee 3 — Variety Show 4. T.J. COSTELLO Class Vice-President 1 — Class President 2,3,4 — Swim Team 1,2,3,4 — Cross Country 3 — Prom Committee 3. AMY CRAFTS Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Basketball 1,2,3,4 — Lacrosse 2,3,4 — Orchestra 1,2,3,4 — Marching Band 2,3 — Show Orchestra 3,4 — National Honor Society 3,4. JEAN CRANE Field Hockey 1,2,3 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3 — Arts Festival 1,2 — Basketball Cheerleader 2 — Hockey Cheerleader 4 — Prom Committee 3 — Variety Show 4. KATHY DAVIS Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4 — Third Edition 3,4 — Basketball 1,2 — Tennis 1,2,3,4 — Concert Band 1,2 — Marching Band 1,2,3 — Musical Cast 3,4 — Student Council 4 — National Honor Society 4. SUSAN DIBARTOLOMEIS Folk Dancing 1,2,3,4 — Yearbook 4. LANCE DILLAWAY Concert Band 1,2,3,4 — Marching Band 1,2,3,4 — Military His¬ tory Club 1 — Musical Cast 3 — Orchestra 4 — Stage Band 4 — Show Orchestra 4. LISA DISTEFANO STAC 1 — Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Basketball 1,2,3,4 — Tennis 1,2,3,4 — Marching Band 2,3,4 — Student Council 2,3,4. HENRIK DOHLMAN Grass Roots Photographer 1,2,3,4 — Yearbook Photographer 2,3, Photography Editor 4 — Musical Cast 3,4 — Fall Play Cast 3. JEANNINE DOYLE Soccer 1,2,3,4 — Orchestra 1,2,3 Vice-President 4 — Gymnastics 1 — Marching Band 2,3,4 — Show Orchestra 1,2 — Winter Track 4 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3 — Arts Festival 1,2 — Lux Lumiere 4 — Outdoor Explorers 4 — Variety Show 4. BRUCE EWEN Spring Track 1,3,4 — Swim Team 1,2,3, Captain 4. 196 JIM FALLON Soccer 4 — Boys’ Glee Club 4 — Mixed Choir 4 — Orchestra 4 — Musical Cast 4. ANTHONY FRANCHI Basketball 1,3,4 — Baseball 1,2,3,4 — Prom Committee 3. JAMIE FRIEDLANDER Basketball 2 — Spanish Club 2 — Whale Group 2,3,4 — Math Team 2,3,4. TEDDI GALLIGAN Soccer 1 — Foreign Exchange Student 3 — Variety Show 4. LOUISE GOGEL Girls’ Glee Club 1 — French 1,4 — Whale Group 3. PETER GOLDSTEIN Band 1,2,3,4 — Stage Band 1,2,3,4 — Orchestra 4 — Show Or¬ chestra 3,4 — WLAF 1,2. PAULA GRAUNAS Field Hockey 1 — Cross Country 4 — Winter Track 3,4 — Spring Track 1,2,3,4 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4. LESLIE HALL Basketball 1 — Winter Track 3,4 — Spring Track 2,3,4. JENNIFER HOCKING Field Hockey 1 — Tennis 1,2,3,4. CINDY HOEHLER Soccer 1,2 — Winter 3 — Spring Track 1,2,4 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4 — Third Edition 4 — Musical Cast 4 — Maelstrom 4 — National Honor Society 3,4 — Variety Show 4. JILL HODGES Field Hockey 1 — Soccer 3 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4 — Third Edition 4 — Fall Play Crew 2 — Musical Crew 2,3 — Musical Cast 4 — Prom Committee 3. SUSAN HONTHUMB Basketball 1 — Soccer 3,4. JULIE ISAACS Orchestra 1,2,3,4 — Show Orchestra 1,2,3,4 — Soccer 1,2,3,4 — Folk Dancing 4. DOUG JACOBY Soccer 1 — Tennis 1,2,3,4 — Boys’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 1,2,3,4 — Third Edition 2,3,4 — Musical Cast 2,3 — Vari¬ ety Show 4. BEV JANIGAN Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Winter Track 3 — Spring Track 1,2,3,4. JOHN JASPERSE Cross Country 4 — Basketball 1,2 — Winter Track 4 — Baseball 1,2,3,4 — Arts Festival 1 — Prom Committee 3. CYNTHIA JOHNSTON Soccer 1,2 — Gymnastics 1 — Spring Track 2 — Arts Festival 2 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4 — Third Edition 3,4 — Orchestra 1,2,3,4 — Show Orchestra 1,2,3 — Marching Band 4 — Northeast District Chorus 3 — Musical Cast 4 — Year¬ book 2,3 Co-Editor-in-Chief 4 — Prom Committee 3 — SNSC 3,4. GWETHALYN JONES Football Cheerleader 1,2,4 — Girls’ Glee Club 2,3 — Mixed Choir 3 — Lux Lumiere 3,4 — Yearbook 2 — Musical Cast 3,4 — SNSC 3,4. SABE JONES Football Cheerleader 1,2,4 — Swim Team 1,2,3,4 — Lacrosse 1. FRED JORDAN Soccer 1,2,4 — Baseball 1,3,4 — Boys’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 1,2,3,4 — Third Edition 2,3,4 — Orchestra 1,2,3,4 — Show Orchestra 1 — Fall Play Cast 3 — Musical Cast 2,3,4 — Band 4 — Northeast District Chorus 2,4 — Variety Show Choral Director 4 — National Honor Society 4 — broken leg 2,3. BRIAN KAUFMAN Hockey 3 — VDT 4. DAVID KAPLAN Chess Team 1,2 — Photography Club 1,2 — Spring Track 2, Manager 3,4 — Musical Stage Crew 3 — Fall Cast 4, Musical Cast 4 — WLAF 4. DAVID KULOW Football 1,2,3,4 — Baseball 1 — Musical Cast 2,3 — Basketball 3 — Spring Track 3,4 — Winter Track 4 — Third Edition 3,4. KENNY MACDONNELL Football 1,2,3, Tri-Captain 4 — Spring Track 1,2,3,4 — Winter Track 3 — Prom Committee, Art Co-Chairman 3. DAVID MCKENZIE Arts Festival 2 — Spring Track 2,3,4 — Winter Track 3,4 — Variety Show 4. LISA MERCURI Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4 — Third Edition 4 — Band 1,2,3,4 — Orchestra 3,4 — Show Orchestra 2,3 — Northeast District Orchestra 2. NANCI MESSING Basketball Cheerleader 2 — Majorette 3,4 — Musical Crew 1,2 — Arts Festival 2 — Prom Committee 3. JEAN MOLLENKAMP Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Basketball 1,2 — Winter Track 2,3,4 — Spring Track 1,2,3,4 — Orchestra 1,2,3,4. JOAN BROOKE MOORE Greenhouse Gang 1 — Grass Roots 2,3,4 — Speakers Program 1,2 — Whale Group 2,3,4 — Fall Play Cast 4 — National Honor Society 3,4. JENNY MOSES Cheerleader 1,2 — Musical Crew, Set Designer 2,3,4 — Fall Play Cast 3,4 — Fall Play Crew 3,4 — Prom Committee, Art Co- Chairman 3 — Student Council 4. GRAHAM MOVITZ Prom Committee 3 — Carnival Committee 2. MARILYN NOBLE Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Basketball 1,2,3,4 — Lacrosse 1,2,3,4 — Student Teacher Corps 2 — Concession Stand 4. BETSY PAPPAS Field Hockey 1,2 — Basketball Cheerleader 2 — Hockey Cheer¬ leader 3, Captain 4 — Arts Festival 1,2 — Prom Committee 3 — Variety Show 4. 197 PATTY PENFIELD Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Basketball 1,2,3 — Winter Track 2 — Spring Track 1 — Lacrosse 2,3,4 — Class Secretary 2,3 — Maelstrom 4 — Marching Band 3,4 — Concert Band 4 — Prom Committee 3 — Yearbook, Sports Editor 4 — National Honor Society 4 — SNSC 3,4. HEATHER PHILLIPS Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Basketball Cheerleader 2 — Prom Com¬ mittee 3. LORI POLLOCK Soccer 1,2,3,4 — Spring Track 1,2. DIANA PULCINI Field Hockey 1 — Basketball 1,2 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4 — Musical Crew 4. GREG ROBBINS Football 1,2,3,4 — Wrestling 1,2,3,4 — Spring Track 3. MARK SAEWERT Soccer 1,2 — Cross Country 3,4 — Winter Track 4 — Spring Track 2,3,4 — Math Team 2,3,4. JAMES SARKISIAN Cross Country 1,2,3,4 — Winter Track 1,2,3,4 — Spring Track 1,2,3,4 — Chess Team 1,2,3,4. LESLEY SAUNDERS Soccer 1,2 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3 — Mixed Choir 2,3 — Musi¬ cal Crew 1,2,4 — Fall Play Crew 2,3 — Maelstrom 3 — Grass Roots 3,4 — Outdoor Explorers 3, Leader 4 — Astronomy 4 — Marching Band 4. LAURA SMITH Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4 — Third Edition 4 — Marching Band 1,2,3 — Tennis 1,2,3,4 — Fall Play Crew 1, Publicity 3,4 — Arts Festival 2 — Spring Fling, Publicity 3 — Musical Crew 1,2 Publicity 3,4 — Musical Cast 3,4 — Prom Committee 3 — Variety Show 4. JEFF SPENCER Football 1,2,3,4 — Basketball 1,2 — Prom Committee 3. LAURA STEPHENS Field Hockey 1 — Cross Country 4 — Winter Track 3,4 — Spring Track 2,3,4 — Band 1,2,3,4 — National Honor Society 4. PAUL STRUMPH Military History Club 1,2 — Grass Roots 2,3,4 — Speakers Pro¬ gram 3,4 — WLAF 3,4 — Prom Committee 3 — Concession Stand 4 — Fall Play Cast 3 — Musical Cast 3,4 — Yearbook 3,4 — National Honor Society 4. THOMAS SWEET Soccer 1,2,3 — Chess Club 2,3,4 — Grass Roots 2,3 — Maelstrom 3 — Fall Play Cast 4 — Musical Cast 3,4. JILL TIERNEY Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Gymnastics 1,2 — Winter Track 3,4 — Spring Track 1,2,3,4. LOURDES TOLENTINO Spring Track 3 — Grass Roots 3,4 — Spanish Club 3 — Art Club 4 — Debating Team 4 — Lux Lumiere 4. MEG TORREY Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3,4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4 — Basketball 1 — Co-Chairman Prom 3 — Musical Crew 1,2,3 — Student Council 4. ALICIA VLACHOS Folk Dancing 1,2,3,4 — Speakers Program 1 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2 — Mixed Choir 2 — Yearbook 4. ANN WATSON Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Gymnastics 1,2 — Lacrosse 1,2,3,4 — Girls Glee Club 1 — Prom Committee 3 — Concession Stand 4 — Variety Show 4. VINCENT WEIR Winter Track 3,4 — Spring Track 2,3,4 — Math Team 2,4 — National Honor Society 3,4. HOLLY WELCH Soccer 1,2 — Basketball 1 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3, President 4 — Mixed Choir 2,3,4 — Third Edition 4 — Fall Play Chairman of make-up hair 3,4 — Musical Chairman of make-up hair 1,2,3,4 — Musical Cast 3,4 — Marching Band 4 — Concert Band 4 — Variety Show 4. MARY WELFORD Girls’ Glee Club 1,2,3 — Mixed Choir 2,3 — Musical Crew 1 — Maelstrom 4. MARIE WOOD Football Cheerleader 1,2,3,4 — Gymnastics 1,2 — Winter Track 3,4 — Spring Track 1,2,3,4 — SAC 1 — Student Council 2,3 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2 — Mixed Choir 2— Prom Committee 3. CHERYL WU Class President 1 — Soccer 1,2,3, Co-Captain 3 — Concert Band 1 — Marching Band 1,2,3,4 — Orchestra 2,3,4 — Stage Band 3,4 — Student Council 2, Vice-President 4 — Arts Festival 1,2 — Spring Fling, Chairman 3 — Whale Club 2,3,4 — Prom Commit¬ tee 3 — Musical Crew 3 — Outdoor Explorers 4 — Variety Show, Conductor 4 — National Honor Society 4. TOM ZAGAMI Football 1,2,3,4 — Baseball 2. IANTHE T. ZANNETOS Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Winter Track 2,3 — Basketball 1 — Spring Track 1 — Lacrosse 2,3,4 — Class Treasurer 1 — SAC 2 — Student Council 3 — Teacher Corps 4 — Greenhouse Gang 2 — Arts Festival 2 — Spring Fling 3 — Prom Committee 3 — March¬ ing Band 2,3,4 — Concert Band 2,3,4 — Stage Band 2,4 — SNSC 3,4. JUDI ZIMBLE Field Hockey 1,2,3,4 — Basketball 1 — Basketball Cheerleader 2 — Lacrosse 1,2,3,4. LI ZPARK Basketball 1 — Soccer 2,3,4 — Girls’ Glee Club 1,2 — Musical Crew 3 — Yearbook 2,3, Co-Copy Editor 4 — Maelstrom 4 — National Honor Society 4 — Bad Typing Club 4. ZARRY ZWARTZ Zoccer 1,2,3 — Zall Play Crew 1,2,3,4 — Zusical Crew 1,2,3 Assistant Director 4 — Zarts Festival 2 — Zpring Fling, Chair¬ man of Entertainment 3 — Zo-Chairman Prom 3 — Zearbook, Business Manager 4 — Zariety Show, Director 4 — Zork 1,2,3.4 198 199 J V r ' f f f ' ll i « 1 i 1 U t. | A | | . m] j n | ’ j 1 ■ ' fl Bf .-• f• a M, ' $0 mm. f t ia ‘M % J ' t uL f . ' ■;1® M K ■ 1 M l 14 j -. ' K| i | ' i;|« u mm TfFjl W •J ■ f 1 ' y ;■- Jf || Jp mm 1 ■■J ] || B ' ' { H i I jHk JR ' V ' • Weston High School 1978 Yearbook Staff. WHS Yearbook T 3531 Weston F h t 4 WestOi r ' u sol Sr t-- ' 0 w ' U -
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.